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Topic: [2017-12-25] Big Bitcoin Debate Rages On (Read 82 times)

legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1427
December 25, 2017, 04:37:55 PM
#3
I don't know what the price is going to be, but my main problem with bitcoin right now is that the transfer fees are simply not sustainable at the moment. I logged on to mycelium after a long while to send some bitcoin, and the standard transfer fee was $27! It threw me off so hard, that price used to be like 6$ tops. So this definitely needs to be solved.

Even I have to admit that the fees have become a bit too ridiculous nowadays. Part of this problem comes from a lacking Segwit adoption, which is a shame if you think about it. I seriously don't understand what services are waiting for. Segwit has been active for quite some time now, and yet it is not being utilized. I almost feel like services aren't interested in making their operations ready for Segwit, which if so, is quite harmful to be honest. I can't wait for Lightning Network to be operational, because this current situation can't keep going in the same direction without improvement.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 16
December 25, 2017, 11:50:31 AM
#2
I don't know what the price is going to be, but my main problem with bitcoin right now is that the transfer fees are simply not sustainable at the moment. I logged on to mycelium after a long while to send some bitcoin, and the standard transfer fee was $27! It threw me off so hard, that price used to be like 6$ tops. So this definitely needs to be solved.
sr. member
Activity: 546
Merit: 252
December 25, 2017, 03:48:16 AM
#1
Bitcoin’s colossal price swings in recent weeks have certainly grabbed the attention of both advocates and skeptics alike. Within just a couple of days, the digital asset’s price swung by $8,000 from just over $20k down to $12k and back up again to around $13.5k where it currently trades.

The naysayers will be gloating while the investors will be looking at it as a simple market correction which offers another buying opportunity before it surges again after the holiday period. Industry analysts at Russia Today have followed the trends and have lent their knowledge and opinion to the big Bitcoin debate.

STATE COINS COMING

Doctor Jack Rasmus, professor of Political Economy at St. Mary’s College in California had this to say;

"It’s not going to be the currency of the future because the central banks will start issuing their own digital currencies before it threatens the money supply. But it is definitely a speculative commodity bubble. Bitcoins and other cryptos are a commodity play, much like gold, in fact, they’re sucking a lot of money, capital investment out of the gold market, and it’s a speculative play, and I think it’s going to go higher. But it is a speculative bubble, and the key question is will it pose some sort of danger to the financial asset markets in general."

Meanwhile, Max Keiser, host of RT’s Keiser Report said this on the topic;

"What is driving the action at bitcoin is people who are looking to store value and escape the US dollar, which is a tulip bulb of our era. The stock market and bond market are the tulip bulbs of our era. The tulip bulb of 1630 was driven by highly leveraged transactions that are what gave us tulip bulb mania of 1630. Bitcoin is the opposite of that."

ASIAN APPETITE

Dr Rasmus went on to acknowledge that it was investors in Asia who where the main impetus behind the drive:

"Margin and retail buyers in Japan are driving this market. It is not the tech nerds in the US. And whenever you get extreme margin buying, you are going to get a lot of volatility. And it is going to collapse. Most of this trade is located in Japan, and the Japanese financial authority has legitimized this."

Ministers in Germany and France have called for a G20 summit on cryptocurrencies to decide on regulation but according to Keiser they are likely to fail;

"There’s no way to stop bitcoin. It’s unstoppable. There’s nothing they can do to stop the adoption, growth, acceptance of bitcoin as a store of value, as a currency and as a unit of account. That’s the history."

http://bitcoinist.com/big-bitcoin-debate-rages/

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