Cusdog, good job
There is comment, that everything is in BTC but at the same time, I see $ on every line. Is this something you can fix for clarity?
Why don't you do the report in USD/CAD/EUR/etc to begin with?
I rather avoid the endless "is btc a currency" debate but at current volatility and the fact, that every price in every *coin business is actually based on fiat, makes it kinda pointless to use *coin as the base currency for accounting (unless you are btc/ltc mining?)
Actually it makes sense to be reporting in BTC.
I don't know what all of the securities invested in are, but disclosed ones are namworld's BTC-BOND and my LTC-ATB.B1. Both of those have a fixed face value in BTC, pay fixed interest/dividends based on that face value and are redeemable at (or very near) face value.
The startup loan is also fixed in BTC - so a large part of assets and all liabilities are genuinely fixed price in BTC. Only major element that isn't is the silver - and it makes sense to value that in BTC as well given that one of the purposes of the security is to invest BTC into silver. And obviously all elements need to be valued in same currency - or it becomes a pain working out what portion of share price is what.
Valuing in USD is either for assets that have a face value in USD or for ones that pretended to be priced in a crypto-currency but are now accounting in fiat so their losses are disguised.
Nice clear accounts by the way Cusdog.
You are probably one of the few who are all in BTC and in your case, reporting in BTC is a must or reports get distorted other way around.
Buying shares in a fiat business and paying with cryptocoin is actually like selling your coin for fiat on that date - using cryptocoin tokens to transfer fiat.
If you sold your 1000 LTC on 01.01.2013 for 0.
005 and now it's trading at 0.
03, have you realized a loss of 0.03-0.005=0.025*1000?
No matter how good your hindsight is, this can not be called a loss. Lost opportunity, maybe, but not a loss of 25LTC or 77.5 USD
What if you bought those 1000 coin for 0.10 USD?
You can realize a loss only if the cost of acquiring those coins was higher than what you received when sold.
After you sold your position, no matter where the coin trades, it has no effect on your finances (except emotional).
Simply put, you can not generate a loss or profit from position you do not have.
Your mistake is not treating BTC as a currency - that simple.
If buy some euros for $100 then a month later sell them for $75 I've made a $25 loss - even though I had same number of euros.
If I buy some BTC for $100 then a month later sell them for $75 I've made a $25 loss - even though I had same number of BTC.
If I buy some USD for 100 BTC then a month later sell them for 75 BTC then I've made a 25 BTC loss - even though I had same number of USD.
If i trade 10 oz of silver for some USD then a month later trade those USD back for 7.5 oz of silver then I've lost 2.5 oz of silver - even though I had same number of USD.
For some strange reason you see the third case as somehow different to the first two (and I've no idea how you see the fourth) - maybe because YOU value everything in USD/euros. Profit/Loss is measured in the currency you invest - not some arbitrary currency that your investments may be valued in elsewhere.
If I invest USD into something priced in USD then I expect profit/loss to be measured in USD. If I invest BTC into something priced in BTC then I expect profit/loss to be measured in BTC.
Exception to that is where the investment is explicitly denominated in a currency other than the one it's transacted in. Examples of that being my LTC-ATF.B1 (transacted in LTC but with a face value in BTC) and Esecurity (which is traded in both LTC/BTC but has a face value set in USD).
Where the dishonesty creeps in is where asset issuers sell things which SHOULD plainly be denominated in USD (assets and income being in USD) but then set a fixed price in BTC/LTC to try to pretend it's a BTC/LTC investment. That type of asset should set their price/face value in USD, do all accounting in USD and report profit/loss in USD. They should also make plain to potential investors that their investment is a SHORT on BTC/LTC. But they don't do that because of some mix of ignorance (some falsely believe their security IS BTC-denominated when in practical terms it isn't - see most FMBs) and deceit (they know they wouldn't get so much investment if they were honest from the start about investors making a BTC-denominated loss if BTC rises).
PM funds in general SHOULD be valued in BTC/LTC - as they're explicit in being a bet that PM value will rise faster than BTC/LTC (they have other uses which are an extension of that). So the value of the fund in BTC/LTC IS what matters - as that's what investors CHOSE to bet on when they invested and is the number they're interested in.