Author

Topic: ETH/BTC Seperate Charts? (Read 102 times)

member
Activity: 392
Merit: 10
February 17, 2018, 01:23:54 PM
#7
Hi,

Does anyone know how a "pair" like ETH/BTC is calculated?

There must be two sets of data, so there must be split charts.

Ideas?

Cheers
We can see that the market has been burning in recent days as the price of bitcoin and altcoin has increased dramatically and ETH is also very good. Therefore, if you trade with ETH / BTC then you will make a huge loss or only small profit. Therefore, you need to monitor and thoroughly examine the competition before making an investment decision.
member
Activity: 294
Merit: 10
February 17, 2018, 12:17:24 PM
#6
Hi,

Does anyone know how a "pair" like ETH/BTC is calculated?

There must be two sets of data, so there must be split charts.

Ideas?

Cheers
We can see the market during the boom days as the price of bitcoin and altcoin are all rising dramatically. We can see bitcoin and Ethereum prices rising sharply in recent days. So I think you should not trade ETH / BTC but trade with BTC / USDT or ETH / USDT, so you will be able to earn much more profit.
sr. member
Activity: 1372
Merit: 255
February 02, 2018, 12:11:37 PM
#5
If you are playing ETH with BTC and USD. Decide which do you want to grow. If you decide to increase the value of BTC then, buy ETH during dips. It will raise the value of BTC. If you want to raise the value of USD, then buy ETH/USD. The pair of ETH and USD gives more profit than BTC/USD.


Hi,

Does anyone know how a "pair" like ETH/BTC is calculated?

There must be two sets of data, so there must be split charts.

Ideas?

Cheers
hero member
Activity: 840
Merit: 508
Make winning bets on sports with Sportsbet.io!
February 02, 2018, 11:38:17 AM
#4
Usually they are both calculated against the dollar, or whatever the native currency you're looking at is. Then the two dollar values are compared against one another to produce a ratio that you see on most charts. On some websites they're compared against USDT which is usually exactly $1, but does vary slightly if demand increases.
full member
Activity: 420
Merit: 136
February 02, 2018, 11:35:16 AM
#3
whenever you are looking at the price of a pair, there is always a base currency that the other one is traded with. in case of ETH/BTC bitcoin is that base currency. think of BTC here as USD when you trade BTC/USD.

so when you say ETH/BTC price is 0.1 it means that you pay 0.1 bitcoin to get 1 Ethereum.

there is no split chart. it is one market with 1 chart.

This, the data sets you could look at if you wanted something resembling what a split chart would be would be ETH/USD and BTC/USD, viewing them against something else should show their individual price movements and how that's then reflected on the ETH/BTC chart.
legendary
Activity: 2114
Merit: 1293
There is trouble abrewing
February 02, 2018, 11:32:09 AM
#2
whenever you are looking at the price of a pair, there is always a base currency that the other one is traded with. in case of ETH/BTC bitcoin is that base currency. think of BTC here as USD when you trade BTC/USD.

so when you say ETH/BTC price is 0.1 it means that you pay 0.1 bitcoin to get 1 Ethereum.

there is no split chart. it is one market with 1 chart.
newbie
Activity: 8
Merit: 0
February 02, 2018, 10:46:11 AM
#1
Hi,

Does anyone know how a "pair" like ETH/BTC is calculated?

There must be two sets of data, so there must be split charts.

Ideas?

Cheers
Jump to: