You're new to Bitcointalk, and don't seem like the typical spammer. That's much appreciated, so welcome
Some advice:
If you're the last to post on Bitcointalk, don't add another post, just edit the first one and add whatever you wanted to add. It reduces spam on the forum, and complies with forum rules.
Now, back to Bitcoin:
Be paranoid! Many people want to get your Bitcoins, many people have had their Bitcoins stolen, and many more will fall victim to theft. There are a few people I trust, but in general it's best to assume people would steal your coins if they get the chance. Don't give anybody that chance.
From my current investments I have come to the conclusion that I prefer to take a hands off approach to investing and that fees can eat into your profits, so need to be minimised. I’m going to take a similar approach to Bitcoin, finding a balance between returns, effort and fees and to start with - not investing more than I can afford to lose
This seems like a good approach to me. Stock market manipulation and inside trading is illegal. In Bitcoin, it just happens in plain sight! Bitcoin can easily go up and down 20% on a day. It took me a while to get used to it, now I just look at big drops as the rich (called whales) trying to get you to panic and sell cheaper. Many people who bought at the top sold $2000 lower last weekend. In case you didn't read that news: there was huge manipulation going on from the Bitcoin Cash guys, attacking Bitcoin by overloading the network with transactions, and in the end the manipulating party gets out much richer.
Trading is a high risk game, where the average inexperienced newbie loses his money.
My current strategy: every time Bitcoin goes up by a certain percentage, I sell a certain percentage of my holdings. I made a spreadsheet that tells me exactly when to sell. This way it doesn't hurt so much when it drops hard, and if it doubles again I still have enough left so I don't miss out on a big increase.
Thanks, too late though, I signed up with Coinbase and bought my first BTC. With fees, they seemed to be about even to other exchanges, but I still have more research to do - this was just an initial small purchase. As the amounts get bigger, I will be looking to store my coins off the exchanges.
I've never used Coinbase myself. A typical exchange charges about 0.25% fee on every transaction.
My plan is to install a desktop wallet when I have some more Bitcoin, although I think Bitcoin Core may cripple my computer. Electrum does look good though.
Electrum is easy and popular. Remember to be paranoid: Use the
real Electrum website, there are also fake sites that try to make you install a compromised wallet. This will steal your coins!
Also remember to not trust just any link you find on the internet (including the link I just gave you: search for yourself, and verify for yourself it's the real site).
Also remember: if your computer gets compromised (which happens a lot to Windows users), your wallet is compromised too. There are computer viruses out there that replace an address between your CTRL-C and CTRL-V, if you don't check carefully, you'll send your coins to someone else.
I'm naturally cautious with things like this, so tried to minimise my risk by sticking to Bitcoin and well regarded exchanges with 2FA.
Several exchanges have lost large amounts of Bitcoins in the past. 2FA isn't going to safe you when they lose your money. Also, many people lost access to their own 2FA, which is another problem.
To read more about wallets, go here:
[General] Bitcoin Wallets - Which, what, why?In general, the safest wallets are paper wallets (for offline long-term storage) and hardware wallets (for easy access). Each wallet has it's own specific pros and cons.
Bitcoin
fees can get quite high nowadays. Think of Bitcoin as electronic
cash: try not to collect many small coins, it will require a large fee to send them.
Don't let my warnings discourage you, learn the tricks and risks, and have fun!