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.
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.
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.