Pages:
Author

Topic: [BETA]Bitfinex.com first Bitcoin P2P lending platform for leverage trading - page 18. (Read 137528 times)

legendary
Activity: 938
Merit: 1000
chaos is fun...…damental :)
Oh really.. I think I remember holding a few loans without any active positions and both my swap and P/L was $0.0. So how is that possible? Essentially I was locking up loans, but not being charged...
ofc the P/L is 0 if you dont have a position but if you took a loan you are still charged check your history
newbie
Activity: 23
Merit: 0
I have some favorable loans used in a long position (85%). I would like to close the position but keep the loans. Is that possible somehow?

I've assumed that that would be the case, but apparently not! I had loans at various rates, with the lowest rates being the first ones I took out. When I closed a fraction of my trading positions later, it closed the more favourable loans as well (a 50% loan, 30 days), leaving the rest of the position with the more unfavourable loans (200%+ loans)! In my opinion this should not happen and the funds should remain available to me, not closed out. Seems like it closes loans in a FIFO fashion, thats why I lost the older, more favourable loans.
member
Activity: 85
Merit: 10
That doesn't seem fair if that's the the case. Undecided
Lenders will get interest, no matter if you actually use the money or not. On the other hand they cannot use the money either, so it would be even more unfair if you could lock up money of a lender and not even pay interest, as it is not in the power of the lender to force you to actually trade.

If you really fear that you might forget that you pay about 1% a day for loans, maybe you should make sure that this doesn't happen - stick a big reminder on the toilet door for example.

Oh really.. I think I remember holding a few loans without any active positions and both my swap and P/L was $0.0. So how is that possible? Essentially I was locking up loans, but not being charged...
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
That doesn't seem fair if that's the the case. Undecided
Lenders will get interest, no matter if you actually use the money or not. On the other hand they cannot use the money either, so it would be even more unfair if you could lock up money of a lender and not even pay interest, as it is not in the power of the lender to force you to actually trade.

If you really fear that you might forget that you pay about 1% a day for loans, maybe you should make sure that this doesn't happen - stick a big reminder on the toilet door for example.
member
Activity: 85
Merit: 10
I have some favorable loans used in a long position (85%). I would like to close the position but keep the loans. Is that possible somehow?

I would love to know too. I heard you can swap loans out for better ones. But I haven't figure out how to do that yet...
member
Activity: 85
Merit: 10
Hey Raphael

Quick question. Under the Lending tab



Lets say have some unused borrowed funds. What happens if I just go on holiday for a week and forget to "unborrow them". Are those funds locked up for the lender? Do I incur any penalty for not actively using them?

That doesn't seem fair if that's the the case. Undecided

donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
I have some favorable loans used in a long position (85%). I would like to close the position but keep the loans. Is that possible somehow?
newbie
Activity: 73
Merit: 0
"Funds currently lent"
"Borrowed funds used in a margin position"

So i issued loans and they are currently under "funds currently lent"
Do i receive interests at the (% per 365 days) when it is only under funds currently lent, or does the $ have to be included in a margin position?

Basically I'm trying to ask is there a difference in return if someone never takes a position and just keeps the loan under funds currently lent then cancels the loan?


I do agree that it's a bit confusing. "Borrowed funds used in a margin position" means money YOU have borrowed. Your money is LENT if it's under "Funds currently lent".

Thanks for the reply, ya i realized my mistake.

I have a new question though if you could help me ^^

When its under "funds currently lent", I have one loan at 250%, i make 250% per year on that $ regardless of whether they purchase something or not? Or is it just sitting in his unused borrowed and i don't receive a return?
legendary
Activity: 1862
Merit: 1011
Reverse engineer from time to time
"Funds currently lent"
"Borrowed funds used in a margin position"

So i issued loans and they are currently under "funds currently lent"
Do i receive interests at the (% per 365 days) when it is only under funds currently lent, or does the $ have to be included in a margin position?

Basically I'm trying to ask is there a difference in return if someone never takes a position and just keeps the loan under funds currently lent then cancels the loan?


I do agree that it's a bit confusing. "Borrowed funds used in a margin position" means money YOU have borrowed. Your money is LENT if it's under "Funds currently lent".
newbie
Activity: 73
Merit: 0
"Funds currently lent"
"Borrowed funds used in a margin position"

So i issued loans and they are currently under "funds currently lent"
Do i receive interests at the (% per 365 days) when it is only under funds currently lent, or does the $ have to be included in a margin position?

Basically I'm trying to ask is there a difference in return if someone never takes a position and just keeps the loan under funds currently lent then cancels the loan?

hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 1000
I can't for the hell of my life access Bitfinex right now.
hero member
Activity: 763
Merit: 500

Edit: superbit, that would be really great, please also publish the code on how to pull the data to the spreadsheet! Smiley

If by code you mean a spreadsheet where I manually copy and paste the history data into a raw data tab I can do that.  Would love to have it pull auto, but I am far from a programmer.

Still pretty easy, cut and paste it and I have formulas set to do all the rest.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
I'm actually seeing a much higher churn rate with my high rate loans recently (again: Is interest really calculated atomically by the hour, so a 61 minute loan pays 2 hours of interest?)... Still I dare to claim that I'm responsible for quite a few % on the current VIR rate, you can thank me later! Smiley

My strategy lately is to look for the lower serious loan offers (4digit+) and then set auto-lend somewhere around these. Yes, it can take a little time until a position is taken - but compared to VIR an hour or 5 of waiting still don't matter that much if I can get a loan out for just a handful of hours.

If you're really desperate, just lend out at VIR, I've seen 2-3 times today alone all VIR loans used up. Also make sure to have serious offer amounts up, it seems to me as if it is more likely to lend out a 3000USD offer at 850% than a 10 USD offer at 150%...

Edit: superbit, that would be really great, please also publish the code on how to pull the data to the spreadsheet! Smiley
hero member
Activity: 763
Merit: 500
Considering the number of offers for lending and the minuscule amount of requests to borrow, has anybody actually succeeded in getting his RECENT offer borrowed?

Wait a day or two.  If that doesn't work, under-cut the market rate.  You can see the lent out money on Market Statistics.  Currently we're at 750,000 USD which is close to the record - and the 250% VIR reflects that.  If this amount falls to 400-500k then expect much lower interest rates (eg. 60-100%).

There are at least three strategies
1) lend out as much of your money as you can (eg. 80-90% of your money)
2) lend out some of your money at market rates, and some above (ex. allot 10% of your funds for crazy 1000%, another 10-20% for 300-500%, etc)
3) go for the high rate loans

I used to be a big fan of lending out almost all of your money. But if people start replacing their high rate loans with low rate ones AND can do this while maintaining their position (a relatively new feature) then you are more likely to get stuck with low-rate loans for a long time.  So now I'm not sure what approach is best.

I am actually planning on publishing some statistics soon showing how long a loan stayed out at every interest rate going from 200% up to 1000% in 50% increments.  Then you can see if it is better going for a 900% rate that is on and off, a low rate that stays on, or somewhere in the middle.  I'll get it all to pull automatically into a nice spreadsheet then make the info public with donations welcome of course.
legendary
Activity: 1868
Merit: 1023
Considering the number of offers for lending and the minuscule amount of requests to borrow, has anybody actually succeeded in getting his RECENT offer borrowed?

Wait a day or two.  If that doesn't work, under-cut the market rate.  You can see the lent out money on Market Statistics.  Currently we're at 750,000 USD which is close to the record - and the 250% VIR reflects that.  If this amount falls to 400-500k then expect much lower interest rates (eg. 60-100%).

There are at least three strategies
1) lend out as much of your money as you can (eg. 80-90% of your money)
2) lend out some of your money at market rates, and some above (ex. allot 10% of your funds for crazy 1000%, another 10-20% for 300-500%, etc)
3) go for the high rate loans

I used to be a big fan of lending out almost all of your money. But if people start replacing their high rate loans with low rate ones AND can do this while maintaining their position (a relatively new feature) then you are more likely to get stuck with low-rate loans for a long time.  So now I'm not sure what approach is best.
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000
Is there anyway to do an account transfer of USD without converting it to BTC, sending it to his bitfinex address then having him convert it back?

Hi,

Yes you can send me an email with the 2 account to credit (sending from the same address as the debited account), and I'll do that manually.

Best regards
Raphael
Bitfinex team
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
Probably via Bitstamp codes soon(tm).
hero member
Activity: 763
Merit: 500
Is there anyway to do an account transfer of USD without converting it to BTC, sending it to his bitfinex address then having him convert it back?
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000
Hi Somevan,

Since you are buying and selling the same quantities of BTC, your profit is really taken in USD.

What could be possible would be to add a pair USDBTC, where to go long on BTC you would short USDBTC. In this case you could your profit in BTC. However this is not on our dev list yet.

I understand the process is quite annoying, if anyone has some ideas to automate that (knowing what happens "behind the wheels"), they are welcome.

Best regards
Raphael
member
Activity: 85
Merit: 10
Let say I'm taking a long position and I'm now making a profit and want to close. What currently happens is that the profit is deposited in my USD account.

Would it be possible to rather take the profit in BTC?

The reason being is that currently, after the trade is finished, I need to move the USD to the Exchange wallet, then rebuy BTC, all of which is quite slow and adds fees.
Pages:
Jump to: