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Topic: How are altcoins collateral (Read 5292 times)

hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 501
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April 17, 2015, 01:29:33 AM
#53
I think its better to exchange the altcoins and get some bitcoins instead of putting altcoin as collateral (120% of value of the loan taken). Plus Why pay interest when you can exchange the altcoins and get your own money to do the work? There are people who do interest free loans when you have a valid altcoin collateral but exchanging the altcoins and using your money  is always a good choice Wink
hero member
Activity: 1064
Merit: 505
April 15, 2015, 03:38:55 AM
#52
i never understood those stupid loans and collateral, i mean what's the point of it? you can just use your collateral for your own load, and resolve your problem

just do it with your friend or whoever, no wonder there are plenty of scammers in that section, they are there, only for that

I understand some kind of collaterals like in real life you put your car as a collateral because you need some money and you want to make an investment of some sort but at the same time you dont want to lose your car and thats why you dont sell it directly but use it as a collateral, but with altcoins? what are you afraid of? loosing your altcoins?
legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
April 15, 2015, 02:08:33 AM
#51
i never understood those stupid loans and collateral, i mean what's the point of it? you can just use your collateral for your own loan, and resolve your problem

just do it with your friend or whoever, no wonder there are plenty of scammers in that section, they are there, only for that
sr. member
Activity: 392
Merit: 250
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April 14, 2015, 06:56:11 PM
#50
I think the altcoins collaterals are only accepted if the lender believes the value is equal or higher than the loaning amount.. Or is expecting that..

It's great because if the person tries to run with the bitcoins, the lender can sell the altcoins to get their worth back..
legendary
Activity: 2828
Merit: 1515
April 14, 2015, 06:52:17 PM
#49
The point of providing the collateral is to put a guarantee on the loan. Many might want to keep that Litecoin, so instead of directly trading it, they can receive it back by putting it as collateral. This way a person can use the value of the collateral without technically giving it up. This is under the circumstance the loan is paid back of course. Other reasons may include the exchange rate and fees associated with transferring over with crypto's.
legendary
Activity: 2436
Merit: 1561
March 30, 2015, 07:38:22 AM
#48

Im not saying its a bad idea overall, but its impossible to know if its going up that much because in my example ltc went from 1$ to 1.2$ wich is a substantial increase, if you are that good to predict that kind of stuff you dont need to borrow 1 btc, you can just do it with your money and make the earnings by yourself.

You're right. I reckon a lot of such small loans are not really taken to bet on exchange rate, but simply to earn a trust score.
hero member
Activity: 1064
Merit: 505
March 30, 2015, 06:28:53 AM
#47

You would have to pay back, you know that right? You have 20.000 ltc but you have to give those 50 btc back, ltc would have to go drastically up as you said but its impossible to predict that. Anyways 99% of loans here are for values worth < 1 BTC so they are obviously not for that

Why 'drastically'? Any up movement will give you profit (depends on the loan cost and tx fees). And why do you think you can't do this with <1 BTC loan?

Well basically as you said fees and loan interest would kill your profit. Like lets say 1 BTC = 100$ and 1 LTC = 1$
You have 120 LTC and you take a loan of 1 BTC to buy 100 ltc. you wait for the price to go up and you sell them lets say the price went to 1.2$ per LTC so you would have 120$ or 1.2 BTC (excluding any fees) so you basically won 20$ for that loan, now you have to payback the loan wich will have an interest of 5-10% maybe more in some cases. If it is 10% you have to pay back 1.1 BTC leaving you with 10$ profit (excluding fees) wich is a profit but too small considering all the things you have to do.

$10 is more than zero. Sure, the amount is small, but the whole investment is not big either. So you should focus on % rather than amount.
$10 is ~8.3% of your original $120 worth LTC holding. If we're talking about short term, say 1-2 weeks, that's very good result.

And if the period is short and the collateral is solid, you could easily find a loan cheaper than 10%. Those 'all the things you have to do' probably won't take more than 1 hour of your time combined.

Again, if you have X amount of LTC and absolutely no other funds available, and you know for sure that LTC will go up very soon, what do you do? Nothing?


Im not saying its a bad idea overall, but its impossible to know if its going up that much because in my example ltc went from 1$ to 1.2$ wich is a substantial increase, if you are that good to predict that kind of stuff you dont need to borrow 1 btc, you can just do it with your money and make the earnings by yourself.
legendary
Activity: 2436
Merit: 1561
March 29, 2015, 08:09:20 AM
#46

You would have to pay back, you know that right? You have 20.000 ltc but you have to give those 50 btc back, ltc would have to go drastically up as you said but its impossible to predict that. Anyways 99% of loans here are for values worth < 1 BTC so they are obviously not for that

Why 'drastically'? Any up movement will give you profit (depends on the loan cost and tx fees). And why do you think you can't do this with <1 BTC loan?

Well basically as you said fees and loan interest would kill your profit. Like lets say 1 BTC = 100$ and 1 LTC = 1$
You have 120 LTC and you take a loan of 1 BTC to buy 100 ltc. you wait for the price to go up and you sell them lets say the price went to 1.2$ per LTC so you would have 120$ or 1.2 BTC (excluding any fees) so you basically won 20$ for that loan, now you have to payback the loan wich will have an interest of 5-10% maybe more in some cases. If it is 10% you have to pay back 1.1 BTC leaving you with 10$ profit (excluding fees) wich is a profit but too small considering all the things you have to do.

$10 is more than zero. Sure, the amount is small, but the whole investment is not big either. So you should focus on % rather than amount.
$10 is ~8.3% of your original $120 worth LTC holding. If we're talking about short term, say 1-2 weeks, that's very good result.

And if the period is short and the collateral is solid, you could easily find a loan cheaper than 10%. Those 'all the things you have to do' probably won't take more than 1 hour of your time combined.

Again, if you have X amount of LTC and absolutely no other funds available, and you know for sure that LTC will go up very soon, what do you do? Nothing?
hero member
Activity: 1064
Merit: 505
March 29, 2015, 05:34:15 AM
#45

You would have to pay back, you know that right? You have 20.000 ltc but you have to give those 50 btc back, ltc would have to go drastically up as you said but its impossible to predict that. Anyways 99% of loans here are for values worth < 1 BTC so they are obviously not for that

Why 'drastically'? Any up movement will give you profit (depends on the loan cost and tx fees). And why do you think you can't do this with <1 BTC loan?

Well basically as you said fees and loan interest would kill your profit. Like lets say 1 BTC = 100$ and 1 LTC = 1$
You have 120 LTC and you take a loan of 1 BTC to buy 100 ltc. you wait for the price to go up and you sell them lets say the price went to 1.2$ per LTC so you would have 120$ or 1.2 BTC (excluding any fees) so you basically won 20$ for that loan, now you have to payback the loan wich will have an interest of 5-10% maybe more in some cases. If it is 10% you have to pay back 1.1 BTC leaving you with 10$ profit (excluding fees) wich is a profit but too small considering all the things you have to do.
legendary
Activity: 2436
Merit: 1561
March 29, 2015, 05:27:46 AM
#44

You would have to pay back, you know that right? You have 20.000 ltc but you have to give those 50 btc back, ltc would have to go drastically up as you said but its impossible to predict that. Anyways 99% of loans here are for values worth < 1 BTC so they are obviously not for that

Why 'drastically'? Any up movement will give you profit (depends on the loan cost and tx fees). And why do you think you can't do this with <1 BTC loan?
hero member
Activity: 1064
Merit: 505
March 29, 2015, 02:44:06 AM
#43
If someone believes the LTC/BTC exchange rate will increase then they would take that loan.

No, what im saying is that if you already have the amount of money you need in altcoins what would be the point of asking for a loan

It's very simple...they are asking for a loan despite the fact that they already have funds available.
They just don't want to risk their own money but hope to turn the loan money into a profit.

That makes no sense because they are giving a collateral thats worth 120% of the loan wich is THEIR money so they are actually risking more money.

Have you ever heard of leverage?

Lets assume you have 10000 LTC. and you think in the next 4 weeks LTC will go up drastically. You can now borrow 50 BTC and give the 10000 LTC as collateral. Now you buy more LTC with that BTC and now have nearly 20000 LTC long position. So instead of selling LTC and buying LTC ( ...) you can go the collateral loan route.

That is also how financial markets work basically, but due to repercussion, they can offer a lower collateral and thus a higher leverage.

You would have to pay back, you know that right? You have 20.000 ltc but you have to give those 50 btc back, ltc would have to go drastically up as you said but its impossible to predict that. Anyways 99% of loans here are for values worth < 1 BTC so they are obviously not for that
legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 6981
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March 28, 2015, 10:29:51 PM
#42


I've never really understood that either. Using money to get a loan of other money seems pointless. I think most people who take out loans here do so just for the feedback though so that's one reason. Using your account as collateral seems like a better option though sometimes people need the accounts to actually earn the money back.
[/quote]

I agree with that, except a lot of folks see bitcoin and other coins as an investment rather than a currency ie not money.
legendary
Activity: 1680
Merit: 1001
CEO Bitpanda.com
March 27, 2015, 10:30:56 AM
#41
If someone believes the LTC/BTC exchange rate will increase then they would take that loan.

No, what im saying is that if you already have the amount of money you need in altcoins what would be the point of asking for a loan

It's very simple...they are asking for a loan despite the fact that they already have funds available.
They just don't want to risk their own money but hope to turn the loan money into a profit.

That makes no sense because they are giving a collateral thats worth 120% of the loan wich is THEIR money so they are actually risking more money.

Have you ever heard of leverage?

Lets assume you have 10000 LTC. and you think in the next 4 weeks LTC will go up drastically. You can now borrow 50 BTC and give the 10000 LTC as collateral. Now you buy more LTC with that BTC and now have nearly 20000 LTC long position. So instead of selling LTC and buying LTC ( ...) you can go the collateral loan route.

That is also how financial markets work basically, but due to repercussion, they can offer a lower collateral and thus a higher leverage.
hero member
Activity: 1064
Merit: 505
March 27, 2015, 12:22:45 AM
#40
If someone believes the LTC/BTC exchange rate will increase then they would take that loan.

No, what im saying is that if you already have the amount of money you need in altcoins what would be the point of asking for a loan

It's very simple...they are asking for a loan despite the fact that they already have funds available.
They just don't want to risk their own money but hope to turn the loan money into a profit.

That makes no sense because they are giving a collateral thats worth 120% of the loan wich is THEIR money so they are actually risking more money.
hero member
Activity: 534
Merit: 500
March 26, 2015, 05:01:16 PM
#39
If someone believes the LTC/BTC exchange rate will increase then they would take that loan.

No, what im saying is that if you already have the amount of money you need in altcoins what would be the point of asking for a loan

It's very simple...they are asking for a loan despite the fact that they already have funds available.
They just don't want to risk their own money but hope to turn the loan money into a profit.
legendary
Activity: 966
Merit: 1000
March 18, 2015, 12:56:29 PM
#38
I never understood how would anyone use an altcoin for collateral, i mean if you want 1 btc loan but you have like 100 ltc, why not sell the ltc yourself instead of asking for the loan?
As if you belive that your altcoin will rise in price but you need the btc funds for something, then you borrow the summ in bitcoins and give altcoin in that value as collateral and after you repay it, the borrower will give them back to you.
It's simpler and faster as physical collaterall.
legendary
Activity: 1680
Merit: 1001
CEO Bitpanda.com
March 15, 2015, 05:24:11 PM
#37
You can leverage your holdings this way if you have a good trade in mind.
hero member
Activity: 952
Merit: 516
March 06, 2015, 04:21:35 AM
#36
I've been thinking about the same thing and you're kinda right - altcoins for collateral are... less than ideal. But the thing is that there aren't many good alternatives:
a) no collateral - legit borowers are drowned out by scammers
b) accounts - doesn't really solve the problem with scams
c) rl items - a little inconvenient in most cases

so yeah... if anyone figures out a system that would prevent most scams (you'll never get them all) while still being simple and fast  that person could make some nice money.

Accounts as collateral are good if you use escrow of course. Any other digital goods that are easy to sell and their value doesnt change much should be a good collateral
newbie
Activity: 9
Merit: 0
March 05, 2015, 07:18:24 PM
#35
I've been thinking about the same thing and you're kinda right - altcoins for collateral are... less than ideal. But the thing is that there aren't many good alternatives:
a) no collateral - legit borowers are drowned out by scammers
b) accounts - doesn't really solve the problem with scams
c) rl items - a little inconvenient in most cases

so yeah... if anyone figures out a system that would prevent most scams (you'll never get them all) while still being simple and fast  that person could make some nice money.
hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500
March 04, 2015, 10:42:05 PM
#34
some would like to keep the coin as a long term investment. usually the collateral is not of as much value as the loan.
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