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Topic: All the people waiting for the next halving: Please explain - page 2. (Read 1747 times)

sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 251
Knowledge its everything
If less bitcoin mined while there are more bitcoiner, so the price will up
But miners would hate this since they will got less profit Sad
hero member
Activity: 515
Merit: 506
Screw It, Let's Do It
Because the price is way undervalued right now.

No it is not. Mining costs per coin are in the range of 80-120$ (without the garbage overpriced miners without ROI).
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 500
Halving is not something we should be thinking about now. The current price seems to be the major issue. Halving means there are less new bitcoin created for every block, which means supply is constricted and less bitcoin dumping.
full member
Activity: 468
Merit: 100
The world’s first Play, Learn and Earn
a halving doesn't create a bubble - it just gives the whales an excuse to pump and dump the shit out of it.


Because the price is way undervalued right now.

Why should it be so? Because you are believing so? The price is what it is and it's in the correct place otherwise it would be another price. It's totally not under value. It's actually still quite expensive.


We all love it when it pumps but you really should be banned from this section Elwar. Your comments are repetitive and really do not enrich the discussion. You have been talking people all year into holding during the downtrend so please spare us the repetive comments even if it would be pumping now. It's really unbearable. You're annoying the hell out of everyone with a brain.
Go to general section and preach it there ... where i don't have to read it.
legendary
Activity: 3598
Merit: 2386
Viva Ut Vivas
Because the price is way undervalued right now.
8up
hero member
Activity: 618
Merit: 500
What exactly is the difference between a decreasing price (50%) vs. the halving of mined coins?

  • 25 BTC @ $200 is $5000/p. block
  • 12.5 BTC at $400 (not long ago) also equals $5000/p. block

IMO, we already had our halving. So if the argument is true, that the halving leads to a new bubble (same demand, fewer coins) at least prices should be constant at this level ~$200. Otherwise I might come to the conclusion, that halvings might have a long-time effect not necessarily resulting in a related price surge.

What do you guys think?
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