Pages:
Author

Topic: Have you started spending rather than hoarding your bitcoins? - page 3. (Read 3054 times)

full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
THE GAME OF CHANCE. CHANGED.
Still in hoarding mode as I see more alt coins will go down the sink not long from now.
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1000
I bought it when it was $430 so I would spend it when it actually doubles in value and then I would look for stuff I can actually buy using btc, which is always a bit hard to find. I was looking for the dell laptops, coz I had a friend who was looking to buy it but as far as my research reveals it is only available for dell usa.
legendary
Activity: 1260
Merit: 1000
World Class Cryptonaire
I'm mainly hoarding for now, won't start buying stuff with them again until BTC price > $900.
sr. member
Activity: 294
Merit: 250
You can do both. When you spend it purchase an equal amount to maintain your reserve. I have been doing it pretty frequently through gyft and a few other merchants.

I agree. I do pretty much the same except I tend to focus on merchants that accept bitcoin directly. Haven't used gyft a lot.





hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
Seems to me that the next key step for bitcoin is true mass adoption. The day my dad uses it to buy something is the day I know we've made it.

Problem is if everyone is holding rather than spending, I am not sure how we ever get there. I know that there are many people spending, but the main game is still buy and hold expecting profits through price appreciation. My question is is this changing now that the price feels like it is settling down a bit? Does anyone have the stats?

Posted From bitcointalk.org Android App
The stats in this article only go through 2013, but I think this is the kind of thing you're looking for:

http://www.coindesk.com/mit-report-bitcoin-more-likely-spent-hoarded/

In 2013, the vast majority of bitcoins were spent within 24 hours of being bought.  If the pattern in that article has held, then there isn't much hoarding of purchased bitcoins going on.  Of course there are also mined coins...
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
You can do both. When you spend it purchase an equal amount to maintain your reserve. I have been doing it pretty frequently through gyft and a few other merchants.
member
Activity: 99
Merit: 18
Seems to me that the next key step for bitcoin is true mass adoption. The day my dad uses it to buy something is the day I know we've made it.

Problem is if everyone is holding rather than spending, I am not sure how we ever get there. I know that there are many people spending, but the main game is still buy and hold expecting profits through price appreciation. My question is is this changing now that the price feels like it is settling down a bit? Does anyone have the stats?

Posted From bitcointalk.org Android App

Spending bitcoin will not help with adoption.

In order for bitcoin to go mainstream two things need to happen:

1. Bitcoin price needs to be higher, i.e. above 100k per coin

2. bitcoin needs to bring value to society. there needs to be some kind of killer app.

These two will be interrelated, the price will not go up without value of the technology and the killer app will automatically increase the price.

The worst thing you can do for bitcoin is spend it, because spending BTC increases velocity or even worse leads to immediately selling of BTC on the market. I.e. if you buy your dell pc with BTC you are effectively selling BTC.

In order for bitcoin to be a real currency it would have to have a massive size, I.e. a few trillion then it would be also able to replace other currencies, however to get there people need a reason to move out of existing money and into bitcoin. that will only happen with a true killer application.


member
Activity: 109
Merit: 10
I just bough a new laptop from dell yesterday
hero member
Activity: 588
Merit: 500
Get ready for PrimeDice Sig Campaign!
I would only start to spend when bitcoin reaches over $1000. I feel like if I spent it now it would just be a waste of money.
newbie
Activity: 33
Merit: 0
Quote from: chennan
This has been talked many times. Many people tend to hoard due to the deflation character.

I think the deflationary characteristics are an effect of hoarding rather than a cause (or worse still it's a loop). the other question is do any retailers price their stuff in bitcoin (as in truly price, not adjust each day as the BTC price changes)? This would potentially change things.

Posted From bitcointalk.org Android App
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1031
RIP Mommy
Meanwhile, every time I turn around, some douchefuck does a market sell of thousands of BTC on Bitstamp with massive slippage, which triggers bots to sell, and BTC is never able to deflate, only tank. Who in their right mind would spend BTC when it's worth less than when they acquired it?
legendary
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1004
This has been talked many times. Many people tend to hoard due to the deflation character.
legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1007
I'm hoarding TO spend, unless I think there's a really good deal somewhere. Then I'll buy.

But I am holding my BTC to spend on items that cost more, not trinkets or anything, but things that require big investments.

Now, I am also holding in hopes the value will increase, as this would allow for less BTC to purchase said items.

I'll start circulating coins soon, however.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
I tend to spend a lot of mine at TigerDirect.  I always keep a reserve though.
newbie
Activity: 33
Merit: 0
Seems to me that the next key step for bitcoin is true mass adoption. The day my dad uses it to buy something is the day I know we've made it.

Problem is if everyone is holding rather than spending, I am not sure how we ever get there. I know that there are many people spending, but the main game is still buy and hold expecting profits through price appreciation. My question is is this changing now that the price feels like it is settling down a bit? Does anyone have the stats?

Posted From bitcointalk.org Android App
Pages:
Jump to: