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Topic: [2017-10-15] Do Bitcoins Belong In Your Child's Education Fund? (Read 222 times)

sr. member
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If nothing will change and bitcoin will be used as it is now for speculation on the stock exchange then it necessarily will fail. The laws of Economics has not been canceled. Now bitcoin for the existence uses only the laws of mathematics. Maybe that's why it is not recognized currency.
sr. member
Activity: 467
Merit: 251
uncloak.io
Back in December 2012, Mark, a fourteen-year old millennial living in Hong Kong, poured some of the money he saved for college to Bitcoins.

Now a student in Australia, Mark is cashing in some of his Bitcoins to pay for his college education and living expenses.

Apparently, including Bitcoins in an education fund paid off for Mark.

But that was back in 2012, when Bitcoin was trading at low teens. What about now, with Bitcoin trading close to $6000? Is it a good idea for parents to pour some of the funds set aside for the education of their children in Bitcoin?

Nobody can say for sure, as guessing where the price of a highly speculative asset will be several years from now is a difficult task even for the most sophisticated forecasters.

But there are a few things that should make parents skeptical about the future of Bitcoin. One of them is timing. Bitcoin had an astronomical rise in recent months, and therefore, it’s due for another correction one that could be vicious. The digital currency has gained 32.45% in seven days only—see table.

Another thing is competition from competing cryptocurrencies, which might eventually lead to a collapse of the Bitcoin market -- like the tulip market back in 1637.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/panosmourdoukoutas/2017/10/15/do-bitcoins-belong-in-your-childs-education-fund/#a3a8e89423dc
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