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Topic: Rise of the Altcoins! - page 2. (Read 3568 times)

sr. member
Activity: 492
Merit: 250
December 22, 2013, 06:03:05 PM
#52
BTW

Given the price action is the last month, I'm guessing that a hedge fund has already bought into BTC, LTC, and QRK.
sr. member
Activity: 492
Merit: 250
December 22, 2013, 05:25:42 PM
#51
I disagree 100% with the OP, and with any speculation that Bitcoin is going to reach some ridiculous number like $50,000 each or something like that.

I think the vast array of altcoins coming out (practically daily now) is taking away from the value of all other coins.

Think of digital currencies like an economic industry, like automobiles or clothing or kitchen appliances.  Right now, the "digital currency" industry is worth about $8billion USD.  This number is not climbing steadily along with all the additional coins coming out, this value is remaining relatively static and is simply being distributed amongst all the digital currencies.

ALL COIN TRADING PATHS LEAD TO BITCOIN.  When a new coin comes out, it simply subtracts from the value of Bitcoin, because Bitcoin must be used to invest in that currency, or to convert it to $USD.  New currencies are not adding wealth to the digital coin industry, they are simply providing more places to move it around.

Something major is going to have to happen before this can change, I'm not sure what it is.  Maybe BTC needs to show up on the NYSE or NASDAQ so normal Joe's can invest in it instead of it being some "dark an mysterious" hacker-currency like the media has made it out to be.  Maybe some major retailers like Amazon need to start accepting it so it gets more public exposure.

As far as Bitcoin reaching $50,000 or some ridiculous number like that, this is simply nonsense.  Again, think of digital currency like any other economic industry.  With BTC at $50,000 that would make this industry worth well over half a TRILLION dollars - sorry but I just don't see that happening.  That's as large as the entire U.S. auto industry.
You're telling me bitcoin can't be worth half as much as the US auto industry? You've got to be kidding me. If bitcoin actually catches on, and I mean really catches on, bitcoin would go well over $50,000.

Of course, it's just as likely bitcoin will be nearly worthless years from now.

Bitcoin's first application is not as a currency, it is an investment vehicle. Bitcoins are a way for somebody to hide their money from governments and consequently from taxes, etc. Hedge funds are soon getting into crypto in a big way. Alt coins will be a major part of that.

What alt coins will the hedge funds buy into? Easy, those that are on multiple exchanges and have been around longest and thus have the most viable networks. There you go. All these new coins are just a distraction, avoid them until they get on an exchange.

What about price? Well the huge amount of money that is pouring into crypto will cause the price of all coins on exchanges to skyrocket. What does that mean for BTC? Somebody was quoted the other day saying $98500, probably true. I'm guessing in 6 months peak of $10000, settles near $5000, then in another
6 months $50000 settles to $25000.
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
December 22, 2013, 05:08:02 PM
#50


I think the vast array of altcoins coming out (practically daily now) is taking away from the value of all other coins.


Exactly and only a very few will make it out alive with in the next couple years. And thats where the gamble comes in.


Yep, its really hedging your bets... if 10 coins fail and the 11th doesnt is going to be worth quite alot of coin
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
December 22, 2013, 01:47:15 AM
#49
I don't think this is so ridiculous. As traditional currencies (fiat money) is becoming quite unstable, usually due to governmnents - government just "prints" money, causing inflation and thus sort of reducing all your savings.

There are several ways that fiat money can become basically worthless in a short time (Zimbabwe inflation), or sometimes government will cut your saving short by several percent overnight, like taxing bank savings on Cyprus, fixing CHF/EUR to 1.2 almost overnight (from close to 1.0), fixing CZK/EUR to 27.5 (from about 26). And if you consider huge public debt, inflation, crisis, financial stability of EU/USA - then the bitcoin may be still a viable alternative to save money into.

Something major needs to happen for BTC to get somewhere near $50000 - but it won't be BTC showing up on the NYSE or NASDAQ - it will be some huge financial disaster in major market (US, EU, Japan, China ....) - people will find that fluctuating bitcoin is much more stable than their local fiat money and switch to it - some of them to just protect their savings, some of them to actually conduct a business. Not very likely, but still possible, if the fiat money gets really screwed.

I keep hearing people compare Bitcoin and other crypt's advantages over "fiat" currencies, but Bitcoin is a fiat currency as well, just not a government-sanctioned one.

"Fiat currency" is any money that has value simply because someone says it has value, or because people want it, without being backed by any physical goods or services.  Bitcoin works exactly the same way - the only difference is that the people declaring its value are the community of its users, rather than a government entity.
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 508
December 22, 2013, 12:10:32 AM
#48
I disagree 100% with the OP, and with any speculation that Bitcoin is going to reach some ridiculous number like $50,000 each or something like that.

I think the vast array of altcoins coming out (practically daily now) is taking away from the value of all other coins.

Think of digital currencies like an economic industry, like automobiles or clothing or kitchen appliances.  Right now, the "digital currency" industry is worth about $8billion USD.  This number is not climbing steadily along with all the additional coins coming out, this value is remaining relatively static and is simply being distributed amongst all the digital currencies.

ALL COIN TRADING PATHS LEAD TO BITCOIN.  When a new coin comes out, it simply subtracts from the value of Bitcoin, because Bitcoin must be used to invest in that currency, or to convert it to $USD.  New currencies are not adding wealth to the digital coin industry, they are simply providing more places to move it around.

Something major is going to have to happen before this can change, I'm not sure what it is.  Maybe BTC needs to show up on the NYSE or NASDAQ so normal Joe's can invest in it instead of it being some "dark an mysterious" hacker-currency like the media has made it out to be.  Maybe some major retailers like Amazon need to start accepting it so it gets more public exposure.

As far as Bitcoin reaching $50,000 or some ridiculous number like that, this is simply nonsense.  Again, think of digital currency like any other economic industry.  With BTC at $50,000 that would make this industry worth well over half a TRILLION dollars - sorry but I just don't see that happening.  That's as large as the entire U.S. auto industry.
You're telling me bitcoin can't be worth half as much as the US auto industry? You've got to be kidding me. If bitcoin actually catches on, and I mean really catches on, bitcoin would go well over $50,000.

Of course, it's just as likely bitcoin will be nearly worthless years from now.
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1000
December 22, 2013, 12:06:00 AM
#47
BrandonQ, I'm not 100% agreeing it could hit $50k.  I'm just saying anything could happen...  Reminds me of tulips...
newbie
Activity: 29
Merit: 0
December 22, 2013, 12:02:49 AM
#46
Mortimer, anything is possible.  You obviously don't understand market caps.  They really don't mean anything.  Learn stocks.  Wall street is coming to Bitcoin sooner or later end of story.

Don't forget, inflation will catch up to us eventually and it will be something fierce, thanks to the FED's easy money policy over the past 4 years.  You can't just print Billions of dollars and expect inflation to not go through the roof.  It's going to happen.

Coins could be a way out of this inflationary period that will hit us eventually, and by that point, tens of thousands of % gains could be quite possible...

My point is anything is possible and one fact, is more and more people with money are jumping into the Bitcoin/Alternate Coin game....  It's going to be a huge market.  Remember, bubbles can last a long time....

I kind of agree with Mortimer tho. Even with the market caps, I can't see Bitcoin reaching 50,000. Of course the value will skyrocket at cap but not to that level I don't think. And obviously every other coin relies on Bitcoin to survive at the moment, but that can always change. Theres bound to be competition that could steal value from Bitcoin in the future.
sr. member
Activity: 462
Merit: 251
December 21, 2013, 11:58:42 PM
#45
I don't think this is so ridiculous. As traditional currencies (fiat money) is becoming quite unstable, usually due to governmnents - government just "prints" money, causing inflation and thus sort of reducing all your savings.

There are several ways that fiat money can become basically worthless in a short time (Zimbabwe inflation), or sometimes government will cut your saving short by several percent overnight, like taxing bank savings on Cyprus, fixing CHF/EUR to 1.2 almost overnight (from close to 1.0), fixing CZK/EUR to 27.5 (from about 26). And if you consider huge public debt, inflation, crisis, financial stability of EU/USA - then the bitcoin may be still a viable alternative to save money into.

Something major needs to happen for BTC to get somewhere near $50000 - but it won't be BTC showing up on the NYSE or NASDAQ - it will be some huge financial disaster in major market (US, EU, Japan, China ....) - people will find that fluctuating bitcoin is much more stable than their local fiat money and switch to it - some of them to just protect their savings, some of them to actually conduct a business. Not very likely, but still possible, if the fiat money gets really screwed.
legendary
Activity: 1509
Merit: 1030
Solutions Architect
December 21, 2013, 11:54:53 PM
#44
Problem with Bitcoin/Litecoin (SHA-256D/Scrypt) is that the reward is going to drop for mining blocks and some of these other alts also have the same issue or they have a problem with amount of coins left, either way after a few years they will have issues keeping the network hash rate imho, if a network is too slow and does not have enough hashing power it will have issues sending/receiving coins which may effect the ability to sell or transfer your investment?

Why Blakecoin beats other coins in the long run:

The modified blake-256 algorithm hash rate is just under 3x faster on the GPU and just over 2x on the FPGA compared with Bitcoin
The reward for mining Blakecoin does Not decrease over time it only increases with block height and difficulty
No restriction on any platform as Blakecoin does not include artificial *Security* that slows down possible mining hash rate and reduces power efficiency
Already has planned use for Blakecoin as a currency storage between MMO systems with prototypes in development

Blakecoin is the fastest !

5.1GH/s on a AMD ATI Radeon 7990
2.2GH/s on a AMD ATI Radeon 7970
1.4GH/s on a AMD ATI Radeon 6970
1.3GH/s on a AMD ATI Radeon 5870
1.6GH/s on a ZTEX USB-FPGA 1.15y Quad Spartan-6 LX150 Development Board

some time in 2014 you should be able to exchange Blakecoin for in-game items in the MMO system we are working on or even learn some new skills by taking a course on 3DS Max or Unity 4.x in the MOOC system we have planed, both of which are not $ or BTC  Grin

The idea of our games is not just to play an MMO game but to also mine while you are playing, same goes for the MOOC mine while you learn too  Cool
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1000
December 21, 2013, 11:53:05 PM
#43
Mortimer, anything is possible.  You obviously don't understand market caps.  They really don't mean anything.  Learn stocks.  Wall street is coming to Bitcoin sooner or later end of story.

Don't forget, inflation will catch up to us eventually and it will be something fierce, thanks to the FED's easy money policy over the past 4 years.  You can't just print Billions of dollars and expect inflation to not go through the roof.  It's going to happen.

Coins could be a way out of this inflationary period that will hit us eventually, and by that point, tens of thousands of % gains could be quite possible...

My point is anything is possible and one fact, is more and more people with money are jumping into the Bitcoin/Alternate Coin game....  It's going to be a huge market.  Remember, bubbles can last a long time....
newbie
Activity: 29
Merit: 0
December 21, 2013, 11:52:02 PM
#42


I think the vast array of altcoins coming out (practically daily now) is taking away from the value of all other coins.


Exactly and only a very few will make it out alive with in the next couple years. And thats where the gamble comes in.
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
December 21, 2013, 11:31:53 PM
#41
I disagree 100% with the OP, and with any speculation that Bitcoin is going to reach some ridiculous number like $50,000 each or something like that.

I think the vast array of altcoins coming out (practically daily now) is taking away from the value of all other coins.

Think of digital currencies like an economic industry, like automobiles or clothing or kitchen appliances.  Right now, the "digital currency" industry is worth about $8billion USD.  This number is not climbing steadily along with all the additional coins coming out, this value is remaining relatively static and is simply being distributed amongst all the digital currencies.

ALL COIN TRADING PATHS LEAD TO BITCOIN.  When a new coin comes out, it simply subtracts from the value of Bitcoin, because Bitcoin must be used to invest in that currency, or to convert it to $USD.  New currencies are not adding wealth to the digital coin industry, they are simply providing more places to move it around.

Something major is going to have to happen before this can change, I'm not sure what it is.  Maybe BTC needs to show up on the NYSE or NASDAQ so normal Joe's can invest in it instead of it being some "dark an mysterious" hacker-currency like the media has made it out to be.  Maybe some major retailers like Amazon need to start accepting it so it gets more public exposure.

As far as Bitcoin reaching $50,000 or some ridiculous number like that, this is simply nonsense.  Again, think of digital currency like any other economic industry.  With BTC at $50,000 that would make this industry worth well over half a TRILLION dollars - sorry but I just don't see that happening.  That's as large as the entire U.S. auto industry.
sr. member
Activity: 1344
Merit: 335
#SWGT PRE-SALE IS LIVE
December 21, 2013, 11:04:04 PM
#40
I don't look at the value of alt's in BTC, I look at them in dollars.

If BTC goes past 10,000 dollars like alot people saying it will,then how much are the  "worthless" alt's are worth each in dollars?

let us say bit coin reaches 50,000 each.
Nova coins are worth 0.01962591 BTC each.

So each Nova coin would be worth about  981 dollars each.
So with ten thousand coins,you would have 9.81 million dollars.

that's with BTC being priced at 50,000 each.  One economist who I can't remember his name says that BTC will reach 700,000 in the future.
At that price,ten thousand  Nova coin would be worth 137,381,370 dollars.
full member
Activity: 128
Merit: 100
December 21, 2013, 10:47:39 PM
#39
WHY should we invest in redcoin?
sr. member
Activity: 322
Merit: 250
Neg trust, was left by competing casinos
legendary
Activity: 1876
Merit: 1000
December 21, 2013, 10:42:51 PM
#37
Will there ever be a day when altcoins won't depend on BTC?

Will there be a day when BTC won't depend on USD?
newbie
Activity: 56
Merit: 0
December 21, 2013, 10:29:16 PM
#36
So what altcoins are the next big thing? :|

Of course this question is going to produce nothing more than everyone shilling for their own altcoin, but I would like to mention that it seems StableCoin is extremely unrecognized as it is.

Its mixed transaction service will provide great, decentralized anonymity.

Yeah I've been following StableCoin, DigitalCoin and WorldCoin as they all have some combination of: active devs, marketable name, innovation and publicity.

Of those it seems WorldCoin is currently doing the best, but I'm really hoping one of the others will start to gain some traction and actually be used for purchasing goods and services.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
December 21, 2013, 10:12:36 PM
#35
So what altcoins are the next big thing? :|

Of course this question is going to produce nothing more than everyone shilling for their own altcoin, but I would like to mention that it seems StableCoin is extremely unrecognized as it is.

Its mixed transaction service will provide great, decentralized anonymity.

Zerocoin should as well, but that might not be out for months, if not a year.
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
December 21, 2013, 09:55:06 PM
#34
Anoncoin has got to be the most under priced alt there is, a great time to invest in ANC!
copper member
Activity: 1380
Merit: 504
THINK IT, BUILD IT, PLAY IT! --- XAYA
December 21, 2013, 09:48:46 PM
#33
So what altcoins are the next big thing? :|

Well, once everyone wakes up out of this Austrian economics silliness, and gets back to the sanity of contemporary, modern economics and monetary policy accepted by governments and central banks world wide, and based on papers and policies of Nobel Prize winning economists, all of these alts will die and the only thing left will be the Bernankoin. Bernankoin is based on real economic and monetary principles that run the real world. 

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/scammers-scamming-scammers-375010

If anyone wants any Bernankoins, I'm selling them now at their fair market price of $1 USD for 1 BEK. Bulk discounts for larger orders. Also, until December 31st, 2013, I'm offering a special discount of 6% to account for USD inflation. So, $0.94 USD for 1 BEK. Prices go back to normal in 2014. (NOTE: I will accept USD equivalent in different alt currencies, even though they're all bound to fail because they're all inherently flawed and based on shaky economic principles, unlike the Bernankoin.) (This is just me being nice and trying to help people out.)

Wink
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