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Topic: $5000+ bitcoin? - page 6. (Read 15437 times)

full member
Activity: 167
Merit: 100
June 12, 2013, 07:28:20 PM
#55
Does anyone still believe this is gonna happen by the end of 2013, after the stagnation of May?
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
May 28, 2013, 11:22:31 AM
#54
I have a friend of mine at the conference this weekend and he has been speaking to a few people who think a $5000 + bitcoin could be possible.

Thoughts ?


It's possible eventually, but I don't think until the next halving at least.
legendary
Activity: 2338
Merit: 2106
May 28, 2013, 11:01:01 AM
#53
Yes more the demand.. But you have to use the currency to buy stuff for it to be sustainable in the long run.. frankly people are expecting a huge rally somewhere in the future so that they can cash out. fiat.. i mean the whole idea of bitcoin was to get rid of banksters and their manipulated fiat.. kinda defeats the purpose of the whole thing when you convert coins back to fiat.. well its my personal opinion and most people tend to disagree with it..

well no, say price goes up to 10K a bitcoin.

All of a sudden I can spend many fractions of a bitcoin to buy lots of stuff, while being able to hold other bitcoins. I posit the higher it goes the more spending you will see, because BTC will have more buying power.

agreed.
people like to spend way more than they like to safe. buying with bitcoins is even more fun (as long as you bought them cheaper) you keep telling yourself that you could actually not afford this, but... hell, it costs so much less because of the value gain of bitcoin. it´s like getting constant bargains. soon enough you start spending more coins that you have actually bought cheap. bitcoin is THE BEST excuse for shopping..

legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1001
May 28, 2013, 09:35:15 AM
#52
I have a friend of mine at the conference this weekend and he has been speaking to a few people who think a $5000 + bitcoin could be possible.

Thoughts ?


$5000 assumes that Bitcoin doesn't really get adopted outside the Silk Road and online gambling worlds.  If it does start getting "legitimate" use and is widely adopted in even a small country, you would be looking at many times that. 
legendary
Activity: 2632
Merit: 1023
May 28, 2013, 09:16:33 AM
#51
Yes more the demand.. But you have to use the currency to buy stuff for it to be sustainable in the long run.. frankly people are expecting a huge rally somewhere in the future so that they can cash out. fiat.. i mean the whole idea of bitcoin was to get rid of banksters and their manipulated fiat.. kinda defeats the purpose of the whole thing when you convert coins back to fiat.. well its my personal opinion and most people tend to disagree with it..

well no, say price goes up to 10K a bitcoin.

All of a sudden I can spend many fractions of a bitcoin to buy lots of stuff, while being able to hold other bitcoins. I posit the higher it goes the more spending you will see, because BTC will have more buying power.
legendary
Activity: 2632
Merit: 1023
May 28, 2013, 09:12:17 AM
#50
Let's do some math. 3600 new coins mined a day (for next 3 years) at $5000 per bitcoin would mean that network operation would cost $18 000 000 daily. Is it likely? I think not.


umm no, why would it cost this to run?

the miners would be making a profit, its not as if power/asics and gpus cost 10x once you have them. Further new hash can't be added that quickly to spend.

only a fraction of the 3600 will need to be sold
sr. member
Activity: 308
Merit: 250
full member
Activity: 192
Merit: 100
sr. member
Activity: 308
Merit: 250
May 28, 2013, 08:33:09 AM
#47
remove the block size limit.  fees will drop to whatever people are willing to spend. add more precision to the protocol.

Why is this not done/considered an option that most ppl expect will happen?
sr. member
Activity: 375
Merit: 250
May 28, 2013, 08:30:09 AM
#46
I don't think it will ever hit $5000

I sure hope I'm wrong though.
sr. member
Activity: 375
Merit: 250
May 28, 2013, 08:29:13 AM
#45
remove the block size limit.  fees will drop to whatever people are willing to spend. add more precision to the protocol.
sr. member
Activity: 308
Merit: 250
May 28, 2013, 08:23:35 AM
#44
Infrastructure will limit the price. As demand increases, price will rise. Assuming the increase in demand is correlated with an increase in the actual network usage (sending txs), there will be an eventual increase in tx fees. Even assuming the average cost for getting a tx through in reasonable time remains at 0.5 mBTC, I don't think users will accept fees of anything much higher than 5% on transactions. Let's say the minimum value in USD we want to send through the network is $5 (cup of coffee?), end users are likely to balk at transmission fees higher than $.25, which would be equivalent to 1 mBTC = $0.50, or 1BTC = $500. At least in the short term, I don't think the ninfrastructure will support prices over this level because new users will start balking at the cost of sending a tx.

Of course, that is a lot of assumptions, but generall sustained higher prices means higher network traffic, which is ultimately limited by physical network speeds and ability for miners to process and include txs. The recent updates to bar small transactions support that conclusion also.

If this statement is correct, then I think infrastructure absolutly will limit adoption and price. I feel a 5% ($0.25) fee is unacceptable in real world transactions at least for small purchases, this is similar to or more than what we currently have to pay massive and inefficient banks. I see no reason why it should require 5% of transaction value to sustain the network. IMO, bitcoin will innovate to improve this or will succome to some other payment solution.

All that said, I have strong faith bitcoin will indeed innovate and we will see a strong future.
legendary
Activity: 1442
Merit: 1000
Antifragile
May 28, 2013, 07:32:46 AM
#43
mp420

Quote
Current Bitcoin can't be sustainably much over $400.

Justification: the 1MB block size limit and the fact that the price has pretty much grown hand in hand with the number of transactions per block (in the long time trend)
. We have free transactions now (for old enough coins). Eventually a minimum transaction fee for ANY transaction will be several dollars, when the block space scarcity really starts to constrict usage. If BTC adoption grows at the current rate, in a couple of years this scenario is going to be real. This will mean, by the way, that the block subsidy will be insignificant far sooner than most people think. At 20,000 tx/block and $1 fee per tx, assuming $400/BTC and current reward level, fees will be two thirds of total miner revenue.

I do not expect doing away with the block size limit until we've seen its economic consequences. Many influential people have gotten stuck in early 2011 and the "everyone must be able to run a full node in their cell phone" mindset.

This is really interesting. Where can we verify this information easily?

Even if that trend is true, I would think supply and demand would set the price as a commodity. As BTC gets more use as a transaction/purchase means, then perhaps the point you mention would be more true?

Thanks for the post,
IAS

note - Mods - When I tried quoting the above text with the quote button in the original post it said to log out and back in again. I just clicked reply and manually inserted the quote that way. Weird???
full member
Activity: 167
Merit: 100
May 27, 2013, 04:22:27 PM
#42
$5000 is a long shot. Judging from the price log scale, bitcoin will be 1000$ by the end of year. When do you think bitcoin will reach $1000 ?

September.

I think 1000 is a more reasonable guess by the end of this year. There must be more bitcoin service and app launched to support the unit price.
sr. member
Activity: 455
Merit: 250
May 22, 2013, 10:38:33 AM
#41
I think the feeling that came from the weekend was that bitcoin may become more of a reserve currency, for big trades etc.
hero member
Activity: 520
Merit: 500
May 22, 2013, 08:29:21 AM
#40
Infrastructure will limit the price. As demand increases, price will rise. Assuming the increase in demand is correlated with an increase in the actual network usage (sending txs), there will be an eventual increase in tx fees. Even assuming the average cost for getting a tx through in reasonable time remains at 0.5 mBTC, I don't think users will accept fees of anything much higher than 5% on transactions. Let's say the minimum value in USD we want to send through the network is $5 (cup of coffee?), end users are likely to balk at transmission fees higher than $.25, which would be equivalent to 1 mBTC = $0.50, or 1BTC = $500. At least in the short term, I don't think the ninfrastructure will support prices over this level because new users will start balking at the cost of sending a tx.

Of course, that is a lot of assumptions, but generall sustained higher prices means higher network traffic, which is ultimately limited by physical network speeds and ability for miners to process and include txs. The recent updates to bar small transactions support that conclusion also.
legendary
Activity: 1036
Merit: 1000
May 22, 2013, 02:27:55 AM
#39
$5000 is a long shot. Judging from the price log scale, bitcoin will be 1000$ by the end of year. When do you think bitcoin will reach $1000 ?

September.
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1002
Bitcoin is new, makes sense to hodl.
May 21, 2013, 08:05:59 PM
#38
$5000 is a long shot. Judging from the price log scale, bitcoin will be 1000$ by the end of year. When do you think bitcoin will reach $1000 ?
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 500
May 21, 2013, 06:04:15 AM
#37
5 thousand dollars isn't cool. You know what's cool? 5 million dollars.

 Huh

Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy

Yeh f**k it, 5 million please.
legendary
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1000
Varanida : Fair & Transparent Digital Ecosystem
May 21, 2013, 05:58:31 AM
#36
I only want to see whether we can cross $500+ within recent years.
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