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Topic: Bitcoin Goes Below $200 - page 2. (Read 1989 times)

legendary
Activity: 1526
Merit: 1034
August 24, 2015, 10:09:21 PM
#15
In all honesty if Bitcoin drops near or below $100 I would probably cash out 100% and stay away. If/when the market rebounds I can always rejoin the scene, but if the price gets that low something catastrophic must have occurred that could potentially kill Bitcoin.
legendary
Activity: 950
Merit: 1000
August 24, 2015, 09:43:46 PM
#14
No one knows the bottom. What I do is to buy when it lowers a specific amount, like I buy 2BTC when price is $220. I buy 2BTC when it declines to $180. It could average my holding costs. 
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1000
--------------->¿?
August 24, 2015, 09:33:44 PM
#13
I keep without understanding why this happened

Is this because Xt polemic?

Very likely.
hero member
Activity: 854
Merit: 1000
August 24, 2015, 09:29:16 PM
#12
I keep without understanding why this happened

Is this because Xt polemic?
legendary
Activity: 2506
Merit: 1030
Twitter @realmicroguy
August 24, 2015, 09:23:41 PM
#11
The bitcoin core developers are apparently modeling their management style after Mark Karpeles. Sad

Go with 8MB blocks and then fork again later. This is not rocket science.
legendary
Activity: 1092
Merit: 1001
August 24, 2015, 09:14:53 PM
#10
Bitcoin users are not a charitable foundation dedicated to preserving miner profits.

There can, have, and will be times when mining is EXTREMELY unprofitable.

Nowadays, most successful miners have free access to electricity and, similar to oil wells, existing investments in hardware are mostly a sunk cost. Even if BTC goes down to $50, there will still be guys cutting in line to mine it on older hardware using various sources of free electricity.

Also, if BTC goes that low there will be a firesale on ASIC hardware. This will allow new players to enter the game and profit at levels that are unsustainable for current miners.

THE SHOW WILL GO ON

This may be true too, but in that event, price bounces back up.
Then difficultly rises, the new miners drop out, and the large farms start again.
Then we are back to above 150 USD again.
sr. member
Activity: 826
Merit: 263
August 24, 2015, 09:10:09 PM
#9
Really, I just hate with all the fuck current issue  Angry
hero member
Activity: 1395
Merit: 505
August 24, 2015, 09:08:43 PM
#8
Bitcoin users are not a charitable foundation dedicated to preserving miner profits.

There can, have, and will be times when mining is EXTREMELY unprofitable.

Nowadays, most successful miners have free access to electricity and, similar to oil wells, existing investments in hardware are mostly a sunk cost. Even if BTC goes down to $50, there will still be guys cutting in line to mine it on older hardware using various sources of free electricity.

Also, if BTC goes that low there will be a firesale on ASIC hardware. This will allow new players to enter the game and profit at levels that are unsustainable for current miners.

THE SHOW WILL GO ON
legendary
Activity: 3430
Merit: 1142
Ιntergalactic Conciliator
August 24, 2015, 09:02:15 PM
#7
A gz to Gavin and his team for this disaster!
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
Crypto-Games.net: DICE and SLOT
August 24, 2015, 08:54:24 PM
#6
I feel that there is a power in nice round numbers to make people buy. For a newb who maybe doesn't fully get the concept of btc a number like $100 sort of normalizes the whole thing. Most are too used to viewing money in units divisible by 10...

That's definitely the case, those units divisible by ten have a very real psychological impact. Once a price kicks down below a level, there's a lot of panic sell. I see that often with alt trading, although I'm still useless at it.
legendary
Activity: 1456
Merit: 1010
Ad maiora!
August 24, 2015, 08:41:30 PM
#5
Just sitting there watching the price on coindesk it went down to $197 quickly, then jumped up again. I know Bitcoin's been there before (and lower of course) but I wonder what other people's strategy now is.

For myself I don't feel too bad, whenever the price lowers I just think it's a good time to buy more. But during this time and up to 2016 what with forking and halving, it's hard for me to know what price to buy more at, I mean, $200 could be great, but $150 is even better... below $100... Bitcoin becomes more shiny for me.

So I guess my question is what's your buy in large price? That price where you'd buy at least ten Bitcoins (I realize 10 Bitcoins @ $100 is probably not large for some people, but you can use your own metric.)

 
I feel that there is a power in nice round numbers to make people buy. For a newb who maybe doesn't fully get the concept of btc a number like $100 sort of normalizes the whole thing. Most are too used to viewing money in units divisible by 10...
That said I think anyone out there with money to invest is probably sitting tight for now. An unprecedented market upheaval is in the offing.
The traditional Wall Street investors who are getting killed right now won't simply start throwing their money into an experimental emerging currency/technology just yet.
Maybe when the dust settles.
Btc will continue to suffer for a while, but if you are a believer and see the long game, just get what you can afford, maybe once a month. I buy my "quota" on my pay day, every two weeks.
But you must make your own decisions. I am neither a financial advisor, nor very lucky in the market... So please don't take my words as professional advice
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
Crypto-Games.net: DICE and SLOT
August 24, 2015, 08:28:52 PM
#4
I believe break even for the large miners is around 180 USD.
At-least that is what some claimed last time this happened.
Two pools even went out of business around 180 USD.
Below that and miners are dead.

So if anyone buys around or below that number,
I believe you are buying in at the greatest time after bitcoins initial rise of 2013.

(Warning, I'm no expert nor financial adviser, you should only spend what you can afford to lose.)

Actually, that's really good to know. Thanks for mentioning that.

But with the whole fork issue I think it's likely might well go lower. Not that people should actually be dumping because of that because you'll still have your coins either way.

I just wonder if this time people will move their money out of Bitcoin and wait before diving back into it. I think it's a speculation roller coaster ride between now and 2016. In possible retrospect, I think this'll be one of those Bitcoins periods where everyone will ask 'what did you do with your Bitcoin between 2015 & 2016.'

I think there will be some huge gainers during this time and after the dust has settled.

I'm not going to kill myself trying to time the market perfectly. It will drive me crazy if I do. I'm just going to continue buying in lump sums once a month and hopefully I get lucky.

EDIT: I guess if it dropped close to or below $100 I'd probably take some $$ out of savings and scoop up a large handful.

Ya, that's pretty much my strategy too. I think financially and psychologically it works well. I mean, if anyone buys a ton of Bitcoins now, they'll be really hurting if it goes lower and then possibly panic sell.

Moderation is key. I generally go with about 10% of my monthly fiat into BTC whatever the price... yet still, double digits and it would be difficult not to go nuts and raid the savings, like you said.
legendary
Activity: 1442
Merit: 1186
August 24, 2015, 08:27:05 PM
#3
I'm not going to kill myself trying to time the market perfectly. It will drive me crazy if I do. I'm just going to continue buying in lump sums once a month and hopefully I get lucky.

EDIT: I guess if it dropped close to or below $100 I'd probably take some $$ out of savings and scoop up a large handful.
legendary
Activity: 1092
Merit: 1001
August 24, 2015, 08:15:55 PM
#2
I believe break even for the large miners is around 180 USD.
At-least that is what some claimed last time this happened.
Two pools even went out of business around 180 USD.
Below that and miners are dead.

So if anyone buys around or below that number,
I believe you are buying in at the greatest time after bitcoins initial rise of 2013.

(Warning, I'm no expert nor financial adviser, you should only spend what you can afford to lose.)
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
Crypto-Games.net: DICE and SLOT
August 24, 2015, 08:07:54 PM
#1
Just sitting there watching the price on coindesk it went down to $197 quickly, then jumped up again. I know Bitcoin's been there before (and lower of course) but I wonder what other people's strategy now is.

For myself I don't feel too bad, whenever the price lowers I just think it's a good time to buy more. But during this time and up to 2016 what with forking and halving, it's hard for me to know what price to buy more at, I mean, $200 could be great, but $150 is even better... below $100... Bitcoin becomes more shiny for me.

So I guess my question is what's your buy in large price? That price where you'd buy at least ten Bitcoins (I realize 10 Bitcoins @ $100 is probably not large for some people, but you can use your own metric.)

 
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