If price stays the same, by mere holding for 2 months and then selling 50% coins one gets initial investment back and still keeps 50% coins. Sell all coins equalls doubling the
investment. If price goes down by 50% then it is still ROI once all coins are sold. For how long will price remain the same (or go up) it is hard to tell but nonetheless it is all a
nice "buy and hold" experiment. The most interesting part for me is what troubled me for last few months - how much TEK I should sell after staking? The more I sell the more
BTC I get at the point but less coins are left for next staking. As shown on previous page, a mere 1 TEK held over 1 year results in 56+ TEK so selling just 100 TEK more now
means 5,600+ TEK less in 1 year.
But by the same token, if you hoard and then dump them, the overall price is going to drop accordingly, reducing the value of the investment you have left... As has been mentioned earlier in the thread, wouldn't it make more sense to trickle feed what you don't want to keep, to keep the price (and, I guess, the market) healthy?
What will happen with the price is up to buy orders. If I want to sell 10,000 TEK and someone is buying even more TEK at highest buy price then I won't affect price at all.
Also, with low liquidity markets like TEK dark pool deals are prefered over public sale for high volume trades. Since at any point there can be a person who wants to buy-in
for a lot of BTC and some other person who wants to cash-out for a lot of BTC it is usualy in interest of both parties to complete the trade out of exchange else either one
party would lose a lot by mere dumping or other party would pay too much by mere buying. So for as long as there is someone who wanna buy my TEK at current prices via
dark pool it is all fine.
In my case, selling a little over time proved as bad deal because not only I have much less TEK now but TEK price went up over 1000% since I started selling part of stake.
I have already returned initial investment, though.