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Topic: What would be the most effective way to stabilize BTC price? - page 4. (Read 8919 times)

hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500

lol
I agree with the rest of your post but, as for regulation goes nope you are thinking in the wrong direction.
The reason for the huge price swings is the relative size of the speculative market

Regulation could limit speculation by imposing position limits.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
The only way I see to stabilize the exchange rate is what most people here so despise: regulation (possibly even taxation on transactions, like  a tobin tax) and something akin to a central bank.

lol
Desperate times require desperate measures or what  Grin

I agree with the rest of your post but, as for regulation goes nope you are thinking in the wrong direction.
The reason for the huge price swings is the relative size of the speculative market.

Most people here are way to "bullish" to admit that but there are 2 ways which can stabilize the price or be it more like a product of both.

First there is the part of the world economy bitcoin represents the larger the more stable will the price be which will tend to make prices go higher.
The second part is the part of the bitcoins in active circulation, the greater the percentage the more stable will the price be. More people would have to sell out (currently only 3%) and it would make prices tend to get lower.

We are heading in the opposite direction though on both accounts, reason being that both bulls and bears are waiting for the other group to move first and while this happens bitcoin becomes more and more a forex gambling tool.

hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500
im not even convinced a substantial increasing in BTC trade will bring stability. It will bring higher exchange rates, but growing exchange rates will also lure in hordes of new speculators and speculations. As long as the majority of trade is speculative, prices will jojo. It doesnt matter how big the underlying market is, speculators will always be bigger. Look at oil, food, etc.

The only way I see to stabilize the exchange rate is what most people here so despise: regulation (possibly even taxation on transactions, like  a tobin tax) and something akin to a central bank.

Since none of that is likely to happen any time soon, or ever, as a merchant your best bet is hoping for some useable hedging tools, but I wouldnt hold my breath.
newbie
Activity: 16
Merit: 0
Just as a thought... if the bitcoin community at large spent a great amount of time on PR and either started offering valuable services at a discounted rate if BTC is used or convinced businesses to offer certain services for BTC, you might see prices regulate and become more stable.
That's what we're doing already. You're welcome to join.

+1
donator
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1054
Just as a thought... if the bitcoin community at large spent a great amount of time on PR and either started offering valuable services at a discounted rate if BTC is used or convinced businesses to offer certain services for BTC, you might see prices regulate and become more stable.
That's what we're doing already. You're welcome to join.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
Makes sense, but what has this to do with my fear of someone with a five to six figure wallet attempting to buy up a chunk of the industry at later levels? (be it one to three magnitudes higher)

Also what you'd have to consider is that if the total percentage in circulation where higher the required price for each bitcoin to archive the same amount of stability is lower.

IF we were to have a somewhat stable price at USD 50 and 3% it should be as stable with USD 3 and 50%.
That being the assumption nearly everybody sell half of their coins over the next period. (Which, I take it is unlikely to happen)

But that said: I don't get the feeling people even want a stable price right now, traders are scalping the shit out bitcoin and don't want to give it up.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
You are both implying that a) a situation where a monopoly in an industry acquired by one individual with over 0.5% of all currency hoarded is not possible and b) someone with such a motive must be someone who bought them originally at an exchange or is planning to.

I've read somewhere that 97% of all bitcoins were never sold and that the richest hoarders are in fact early miners. (According to Blockchain statistics)
Even if somebody wouldn't be likely to have acquired them with the goal to do so but could in fact see this as an opportunity to attempt it.
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
It remains an attractive target for every jackoff who thinks they can do it. The disruption is all the same.

Let me qualify my argument a bit:

A low price doesn't provide stability, and indeed reduces it - I agree with you there.  However, a low price indicates that the destabilizing jackoffs have left the market.  For that, I believe we will therefore see stability correlated with a lower price.

Of course, even greater stability results from a high price driven by commerce.


Quote
The same goes for routine transactions that are simply largeish. Someone pays for a fancy car just because they can, and has to convert through the exchange to do it can set up price swings that last for days in a smaller market, whereas a larger market could restabilize in hours or minutes...

Absolutely.  This is preventing me from doing my business in BTC today.  I'll try to switch to BTC as soon as the market depth supports it, but we're a long way from there.


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Keeping Bitcoin at $2 makes it a toy.

Artificially inflating the price to $30 makes it a joke.  I don't want to stay at $2 forever.  I just want it to grow with real commerce instead of crazy speculation.
legendary
Activity: 1666
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Marketing manager - GO MP
@chodpaba
Don't you think that holds true on the other hand of the spectrum? As soon as the prices are resembling anything long term investors are hoping for some early adopters could see the window of opportunity and do whatever they want with the economy. There are individuals with five to six figures in BTC holdings and if they decide to want to buy up an industry they'd do it.

It does not hold true at the low end of the spectrum because anyone can come in at any time with a modest investment and start playing pump and dump all over again. Hell, even if the holders of large amounts of BTC are really smart and effective traders it is still within the realm that a single MM could come in with an investment equal to 100% of the market and just muscle it away from them.

Why would one be interested in that if one could own, for example the whole market for supplying 3D-Printing raw materials, or Massive Parallel Processing Arrays, or any of the hypothetical emerging Industries.
I suspect that we have at least a dozen individuals who are planning to do exactly that, because we would have seen a much, much further drop after 30 otherwise, but we haven't. (In that scenario the price right now would be stabler and a little higher)

They won't sell out at 100, 200, 300, 500, or 1000. They want a monopoly, god help us if it ever comes to that...
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
This is completely correct. With a million dollars, even a fool will be able to manipulate the price up 5000%. No person would argue this is stable.

With a million dollars I can manipulate the price up 5000% today.  I wouldn't be able to hold it there very long since I'd be bleeding money fast, but I'd probably get a couple hours before someone with a large enough wallet came along to sell through me.

Price manipulation potential is not a simple ratio of your cash on hand to the market cap.
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
That's correct - a low market cap can be cheaply manipulated.  However, the high market cap simply means that we have a very large hoarde of speculative investors who're pushing the price around without regard to fundamentals.  A low market cap means that the hoarde has left, and the price is beginning to be controlled by commerce again.  Pushing the price around by large percentages against a heavier fundamental anchor just increases your losses in doing so - I'll remind you that cornering a market is a fool's errand.  That's where the stability comes from.

Real stability will come from increased commerce which will result in a high enough market cap to make the price harder to push - stability from both sides.
legendary
Activity: 1246
Merit: 1077
There is no way in hell the Bitcoin exchange rate will achieve anything resembling stability at low price levels. As long as the market remains small as it is it will be easy for even individual actors to play havoc with the day-to-day rate of exchange. A $50/BTC at 21million Bitcoin is just over a one billion dollar monetary base equivalent... Even that is small, and not immune from manilpulation, but it should probably be considered the lower end of the threshold for the size of Bitcoin MB if exchange rate stability is to be the remotest possibility.

To think that stability will be found at a single digit 'floor' is beyond absurd.
This is completely correct. With a million dollars, even a fool will be able to manipulate the price up 5000%. No person would argue this is stable.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
So actually there is a way to stabilize prices: A fully decentralized exchange method which can never be shutdown or hacked.

Assuming you have to exchange Bitcoin with some external thing (by definition), what can be better than #bitcoin-otc? An easy to use client software and a distributed storage for the WoT database? Or do you have something else in mind?

That could be a nice start.

Things are complicated, I've been dreaming about this a long time, even before bitcoin came along but I never got around to write something down.
Has to do with some rewrite of some archaic data entry software, a decentralized physical network layer and "tiers" of collaborative growth according to the number of people working most successfully in a group.

Some of it could be substituted by existing things like tor, community networks and the now BTC WoT but stitching those together would result in a different concept. But something to enable a working exchange method for bitcoin could be a good start.

I am not yet convinced though that bitcoin would be the ideal candidate to finance the project since the goal would require a substantial part of the economic power behind it and I am doubtful people are willing to give that.

@chodpaba
Don't you think that holds true on the other hand of the spectrum? As soon as the prices are resembling anything long term investors are hoping for some early adopters could see the window of opportunity and do whatever they want with the economy. There are individuals with five to six figures in BTC holdings and if they decide to want to buy up an industry they'd do it.
hero member
Activity: 938
Merit: 1002
So actually there is a way to stabilize prices: A fully decentralized exchange method which can never be shutdown or hacked.

Assuming you have to exchange Bitcoin with some external thing (by definition), what can be better than #bitcoin-otc? An easy to use client software and a distributed storage for the WoT database? Or do you have something else in mind?
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
I don't think it can be stabilized.

If markets would have been remained open the whole time this would be a different story, but it did happen (closed markets) the consequences are here.
So actually there is a way to stabilize prices: A fully decentralized exchange method which can never be shutdown or hacked.
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
I agree that increasing services used in BTC is the only real way to stabilize the currency.  I rant about this occasionally, and we're trying to quantify where the real floor (and thus stability) is.

The list you want is over here.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
So, I've been thinking about this a lot.  It seems like if bitcoins were a more widely utilized medium, the price would stabilize because people would be interested in exchanging from within the currency rather than just using it as a transactional medium.

Just as a thought... if the bitcoin community at large spent a great amount of time on PR and either started offering valuable services at a discounted rate if BTC is used or convinced businesses to offer certain services for BTC, you might see prices regulate and become more stable.

I honestly expect to see BTC price reflect a combination of mining cost and economy size.  IE, if the average person began to transact 1% of their total expenditures in BTC and BTC held a fixed value more widely (as opposed to currently being only as valuable as it's equivalent trade value in USD), you would see the trade value stabilize because price wouldn't strictly be the result of speculation.

Basically if their were a demand for the currency because it had implicit trade value, the value and liquidity would improve.

What this would take:

Many service providers to begin to offer services at a slight discount in BTC OR offer services or web products for a fixed BTC price regardless of trading value.

For so long as the currency serves little purpose besides speculative and transactional ease, it will lack the necessary market depth to regulate price.

Any thoughts? 

Is there a list anywhere of service providers that will trade in BTC?  Something we as a community can help to promote in order to increase the adoption of the currency?
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