Two concerns: First, I'm very long (years) on BTC, and I believe we
are going to see a major (x10 at least) price increase in the next five years.
I have seen people borrowing large amounts in a currency that was different
than the one they earned their salary in and get literally *ruined* ... I am
really concerned with you actual ability to repay a loan over that long a period.
You address this in your Q&A, but I am truly not convinced by your answer.
Riddle me this: do you think you could survive a x10 price hike halfway down
the loan (2.5 years from now) ?
Second concern: The rate you'd like to borrow at is really not competitive as
compared to the current market rate on these forums ... I doubt you'll find many
lenders at this point, the opportunity cost gap is way too large. Again, addressed
in your Q&A, and again, answer is not convincing: yes, the super short term loan
business is a lot of work, but the annualized rates make both the work and the risk
worth a go.
But ... again, very interesting idea, following with interest.
Hey Znort.....you make good points. Let me see if I can give some suitable answers.
In regards to the currency risk, and whether I could withstand a x10 price hike: Let's assume 4,000 BTC of the loan is to be repaid in BTC. The quarterly payments would be approximately 250 BTC. My shares in Bitcorp yield several hundred BTC a month(900 per quarter) currently, which gives me over 300%+ coverage on BTC debt payments. Now, lets assume with a x10 price increase, the difficulty spikes as well. Even if the difficulty goes to 4,000,000...I will still have 100+% coverage. Finally, I would be willing to post a reserve account, maybe comprising 2 quarterly payments to be held by a trusted 3rd party, that would be used in the event of any shortfall on my behalf.
On the rate being offered: This is clearly a stumbling point. To simply cut to the chase, 10% is about all I can offer and still make the numbers work on my end. At the end of the day, I want this loan in order to finance a better yielding asset. If I give away the entire profit margin just to engage in a cool academic excercise, the economic motive disappears. I can get 5.5% at my bank, but am willing to pay the additional 4.5% in order to help broaden the possibilities for Bitcoin. Any higher than that, and I start to squeeze the net interest margin too much.
Does that help?