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Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion - page 24675. (Read 26714004 times)

donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
hero member
Activity: 910
Merit: 1003
Please stop referring to the May 2014 price rise as a "bubble". It is part of the deflation pattern of the November 2013 (mania phase of the) bubble. [ ... ] (that I called bull trap)

Sorry for abusing the term.  I used "bubble" in the very broad sense of "fast price increase that starts and stops rather abruptly". 

Is "bull trap" appropriate, though?  The price was relatively flat at the top for about two months.  "Trap" suggests a move that quickly reverses, causing the traders who bought or sold late in the move to lose money.

IMO there are 2 reasons for the May 2014 uptrend : the PBoC stopped feeding bad news to the market, so the market lost some downward momentum and the linear descending channel broke, which was inevitable at some point, otherwise price would have reached 0$ by now.

The stabilization of the price at ~450$ from Apr/25 to May/19 must indeed have been due to absence of further bad news from the Chinese government, and to the "five exchanges" public pledge to make the game more friendly to small players.  But I don't see why the sudden rise after May 20 could have been due to that.

The May/2014 "bubble" was also very different from the typical bubble -- not an exponential that started off gradually and accelerated, but instead a steep linear rise, starting with no advance warning at all.  Looking closely, it was actually a series of concentrated buying episodes, each lasting only a couple of hours, separated by days of aimless (or downward) wandering.   

I explained earlier my theory about that "bubble", although I still cannot tell who those mystery buyers were.  I think (but with not much confidence) that those late-May buyers are still mostly holding; so that the -300$ drop after Aug/2014 is not due to to them, but is only a continuation of the drop from Feb to Apr, namely the Chinese speculators continuing to pull out.  (By the way, Bobby Lee of BTC-China claimed that the Huobi and OKCoin broke their pledge, some time after May.)
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
I've been buying during this bear market, then I sodl for lower than I bought, then I bought back for even lower than I sodl, ending up where I started. This is about as good as you can hope for daytarding.


Just because you suck at something doesn't mean everyone else does.  Wink

Note that I suck at daytrading (which is why I don't do it), so don't think I'm hating.

I don't think I suck, I think I was neither lucky nor unlucky. I came out where I started.

Point being, I consider it a gamble rather than a skill. (Yes there's skill involved, but short of having the ability to travel through time in a way that other people cannot, luck is the main factor in trading success for sure.)

A very disciplined, skillful trader might make a profit for sure, but a big move and some bad luck and it's over.

Ha I'm just busting your balls, man. As I said, I can't do that shit, either.
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
playing pasta and eating mandolinos
But the data is not really random, and some of the patterns do indeed repeat with some predictability. Some people trade 'at random', without any clue whatsoever. So what, this doesn't mean anything. If everybody is losing, who's winning?

legendary
Activity: 1400
Merit: 1013
I've been buying during this bear market, then I sodl for lower than I bought, then I bought back for even lower than I sodl, ending up where I started. This is about as good as you can hope for daytarding.


Just because you suck at something doesn't mean everyone else does.  ;0
The only thing that anyone sucks at here is basic math and statistics.

http://www.alphaarchitect.com/blog/2011/06/30/mission-impossible-beating-the-market-over-long-periods-of-time/

http://www.moneyshow.com/articles.asp?aid=No-Nonsense-32901

The number of expert stock traders who can consistently beat the market is statistically indistinguishable from zero. This result is only surprising because with the amount of blatant fraud on Wall Street you'd expect the cheaters to be able to muster more than 0.6%.

Stock trading is just gambling. Apparent skill at trading is an artifact of human brains seeing patterns in randomness that don't exist.
legendary
Activity: 1680
Merit: 1045
I've been buying during this bear market, then I sodl for lower than I bought, then I bought back for even lower than I sodl, ending up where I started. This is about as good as you can hope for daytarding.


Just because you suck at something doesn't mean everyone else does.  Wink

Note that I suck at daytrading (which is why I don't do it), so don't think I'm hating.

I don't think I suck, I think I was neither lucky nor unlucky. I came out where I started.

Point being, I consider it a gamble rather than a skill. (Yes there's skill involved, but short of having the ability to travel through time in a way that other people cannot, luck is the main factor in trading success for sure.)

A very disciplined, skillful trader might make a profit for sure, but a big move and some bad luck and it's over.
legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1094
...
However, the price got from 140$ to 800$ not because of some mysterious "multi-year trend force" pulled it up, but because the Chinese speculators discovered bitcoin and bough it en masse; and it fell from 800$ to the present 350$ not because of some even more mysterious "correction force", but because the Chinese government policies have been driving most of those speculators away.  It can't get more obvious than that.
...

The price was already in an obvious uptrend when the Chinese speculators stepped in and pumped it, so instead of a peak of around 600$ in spring 2014,
the peak was around 1200$ in December 2013 (market moved a lot faster up with the Chinese). Events can heavily influence the market, but price affects price.
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
playing pasta and eating mandolinos
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
I've been buying during this bear market, then I sodl for lower than I bought, then I bought back for even lower than I sodl, ending up where I started. This is about as good as you can hope for daytarding.


Just because you suck at something doesn't mean everyone else does.  Wink

Note that I suck at daytrading (which is why I don't do it), so don't think I'm hating.
legendary
Activity: 1680
Merit: 1045
Molecular hasn't started buying yet, yet he is a donator. Weird.

mining?

used to be all fun and games. Didn't think it would turn out so well financially back then.

To be fair: I have bought also, but it was in 2011, not during the current bear market. So I think saying "I haven't started buying yet" is applicable given the context.



yeah I know, I was just being a dick Tongue

I've been buying during this bear market, then I sodl for lower than I bought, then I bought back for even lower than I sodl, ending up where I started. This is about as good as you can hope for daytarding.

I'll be buying more if we hit the 200s again for sure.
donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
Like the dudes on wall street?
Especially them.

There's a difference, though: average gamblers don't get bailouts.
hero member
Activity: 910
Merit: 1003
[ ... ] comical hunt for "causes" of local price increases, but this one is too good to pass on:

Current price is the result of "three bubbles", starting Jan 2013?

So the entire trading history of late 2010 to late 2012, when price discovery was truly bootstrapped, with maybe the first major milestone being dollar parity, is just a historical footnote? No effect on price today?

Prices do not move on their own, by looking at their past history, without any external causes.  Apple stock goes up or down because of their current products and marketing, not because of what its price did 5 or 20 years ago.

I wonder how the poor BTC price managed to survive 2009 without going insane.  Imagine having to decide whether to go up or down, every single day, without even one year of past history to tell it what to do.

Seriously, the previous history of bitcoin (and not just of its price) certainly influenced those 3 events, especially since they appear to have been mostly the opening of short-term speculative markets (as opposed to communities of computer nerds, as in 2009, or people using bitcoin for payments, as may have been the case of some previous bubbles).  Presumably, many of the people who bought coins in those three events did so because they saw those multi-year trend extrapolations and believed them.  But even they surely were more impressed by the price increase in the previous year than by what happened in the previous years.

The events before 2013 also prepared the ground by soaking up the most part of the 14 million coins, leaving a relatively small amount for short-term speculators to play with; so that the entry in 2013 of N new traders in the game would have a much larger effect on prices than it would have had otherwise.  And, granted, many of the long-term investors who are holding the bulk of those older coins may do so because they believe in that multi-year TA, too.

However, the price got from 140$ to 800$ not because of some mysterious "multi-year trend force" pulled it up, but because the Chinese speculators discovered bitcoin and bough it en masse; and it fell from 800$ to the present 350$ not because of some even more mysterious "correction force", but because the Chinese government policies have been driving most of those speculators away.  It can't get more obvious than that.

Three discrete events causally determine today's price. Got it.

Great. You will see that it will all begin to make sense from now on.  Grin 

Too bad that it makes the price nearly impossible to predict.  Lines on charts cannot tell whether Bitcoin will be the next TelexFree in Brazil, or whether the US government will change its mind and decide to ban it...
legendary
Activity: 1400
Merit: 1013
donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
Molecular hasn't started buying yet, yet he is a donator. Weird.

mining?

used to be all fun and games. Didn't think it would turn out so well financially back then.

To be fair: I have bought also, but it was in 2011, not during the current bear market. So I think saying "I haven't started buying yet" is applicable given the context.

donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
There's another way to "win" at this: get out while you're on top. Works in conjunction with "random results", but is hard to do, because when you're having a lucky streak, it's usually quite a bit of fun.. why leave?
Same strategy works on slot machines.

It's fine for people who understand they are gambling, but there's a tendency for people to start believing they that it's a game of skill instead of a game of chance.

Like the dudes on wall street?
qwk
donator
Activity: 3542
Merit: 3413
Shitcoin Minimalist
I always forget that mining used to actually result in bitcoins. Now it results in heat and electricity bills.
Cheesy
legendary
Activity: 1106
Merit: 1007
Hide your women
looking at the order books, BFX and Stamp are bullish and Huobi is bearish. At some unknown point in the Future, the Chinese will either start buying again or run out of coins. When that happens it's off to the races.
legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 1823
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
legendary
Activity: 1680
Merit: 1045
Molecular hasn't started buying yet, yet he is a donator. Weird.

holding bitcoins and thus being able to donate them doesn't require buying. probably an old miner.

true! I always forget that mining used to actually result in bitcoins. Now it results in heat and electricity bills.
legendary
Activity: 1778
Merit: 1008
Molecular hasn't started buying yet, yet he is a donator. Weird.

holding bitcoins and thus being able to donate them doesn't require buying. probably an old miner.
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