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Topic: [2017-12-09] CNBC’s Jim Cramer Calls Bitcoin “Monopoly Money” (Read 2353 times)

legendary
Activity: 1526
Merit: 1179
It's typical for those who don't see value in Bitcoin, and even feel threatened by it to react like this. However, I can't deny that at this point, the market is probably already, or at least near to being a bubble.

I am here for the long term, and believe that there is so much more to gain than current levels, but it's pointless to act like a blind chicken constantly running forward without being able to see how things around itself really are.

Current levels are not healthy, and at some point it will come down again. It's pure blind speculation that at this point drives the price up, where common sense is not part of people's dictionary anymore.

The only question remains when the market will come down. It might be after reaching $20-$30k, or it might be very near as we speak.
sr. member
Activity: 630
Merit: 272
I do not believe that bitcoin is a bubble. But even if someday bitcoin will die it does not mean that we should miss out on your chance to earn. All people know that to win in online casino it is impossible but that doesn't stop millions of people around the world to visit the casino and buy lottery tickets.
hv_
legendary
Activity: 2534
Merit: 1055
Clean Code and Scale
I can move monoply money much more easier...

Its more a frozen store of value (hype?) and you have to cheat the mempool to get access.
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 251
CNBC on Wednesday ran a segment claiming bitcoin is a bubble. The segment began showing CNBC “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer calling bitcoin “monopoly money” and saying that investing in it is “pure gambling.” Cramer said gamblers would be better off in Las Vegas than investing in bitcoin.


Bitcoin’s Place In History’s Bubble


After running clips of financial experts denigrating bitcoin, the CNBC segment compared bitcoin to the tulip bubble of the 1600s, the Mississippi bubble, the South Sea bubble, the tech bubble, the financial crisis, Japanese stocks, the Great Depression and the S&P 500 today. The chart compared the multiple starting prices for each of these bubbles, then noted bitcoin’s multiple is approaching that of the greatest bubble in history, the tulip bubble.

The segment cited the following signs of a bubble that bitcoin exhibits: rapid pace movements, a lot of speculation without a lot of understanding of the risks, and a lot of non-traditional investors jumping in.

The narrator compared the bitcoin futures being launched by Cboe, the CME Group and Nasdaq to a move the Dutch made prior to the tulip bubble crash.

‘Unexplainable Highs’

“For every asset bubble, it’s the same story; otherwise level-headed people drive prices for a certain asset to unexplainable highs, whether that’s the price of beanie babies, stocks, houses, or perhaps cryptocurrency,” the narrator stated.

Bitcoin, since its inception, has increased almost 50-fold, the segment noted. If it maintains that growth rate, it will eclipse the U.S. economy in a few years. Where other assets yield returns of some sort, bitcoin has no intrinsic value, and generates no income besides an expectation of further price increases, the narrator said.

“It’s valuable because people think it’s valuable.”

“Bitcoin has gone parabolic, so that usually does not end well,” an expert named Cashin stated. Bitcoin’s price has gone “parabolic,” and such bubbles don’t last, the segment concluded.

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/cnbc-segment-warns-bitcoin-could-be-greatest-bubble-ever/
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