Pages:
Author

Topic: Where to invest bitcoins - page 9. (Read 7378 times)

hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
December 31, 2014, 02:33:02 AM
#58
I have got a few spare bitcoins.Please suggest a trustworthy site where I can invest them for some profit.


same like me, were looking too Smiley

I've never tried to trade, mining and HYIP all ended badly -_-
hero member
Activity: 706
Merit: 500
https://twitter.com/CryptoTrout
December 30, 2014, 06:50:44 PM
#57
I would avoid "investing" bitcoins into websites, most are scams or ponzi schemes.  

If you want to try and increase your bitcoin holdings without buying more BTC you could try margin trading BTC/USD.  
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
December 30, 2014, 06:41:36 PM
#56
Don't invest in dice site ! Just hold your coins and wait for the price to rocket
Well, that might not be the best way to invest them. Youy can always look at real world options for investing on companies whose identities are known.
The risk as always while investing in an online gambling site is that , once they have the private keys, you do not own them.
member
Activity: 65
Merit: 10
December 30, 2014, 12:00:18 PM
#55
Don't invest in dice site ! Just hold your coins and wait for the price to rocket

Is someone anticipating another $1,000 spike ? I mean realistically is Bitcoins are to be considered an actual currency that people have faith in, it's not going to work in the charts look as ridiculous as they do over the past 1.5 years.
hero member
Activity: 692
Merit: 569
December 30, 2014, 07:04:08 AM
#54
Don't invest in dice site ! Just hold your coins and wait for the price to rocket
legendary
Activity: 1064
Merit: 1000
December 29, 2014, 05:57:38 PM
#53
Further investigation shows you do indeed have a certificate, just not on your landing page (Very unpro).

SSL certificate does little to help this issue you have with your server however: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS10-070.asp
sr. member
Activity: 563
Merit: 254
Chief Operating Officer of the Panxora Group
December 29, 2014, 04:02:58 PM
#52
Since your last posting I have spoken to my TD who says we HAVE an SSL certificate. So your comments are without merit. Our team, who all come from the financial service industry in the UK and Switzerland have spent a year carefully developing our proposition. Putting our effort and money into bringing it to market. Carefully nurturing a customer base that is becoming quite loyal.
Posting unfounded negative information on a forum cheapens the forum and is akin to trolling which is a shameful occupation.
First Global Credit has been profiled on CoinDesk and CoinTelegraph as well as numerous other coin based publications and we were featured in Futures magazine. Anyone can contact me directly for the reference. (They seem to pull web addresses on the forum for some reason?)
We have impeccable customer support. We are committed to bringing a worldclass service to market in the digital currency space and I encourage anyone really interested to start a totally free test account on either service we offer to see how seamless and responsive the service is. [Development continues to improve it]
Finally. Where other services make their margin by taking a spread on what they sell to their customer at, we fill at the market price and publish a fair fee schedule.
I welcome any legitimate comment about our service. And find it the lowest form of behaviour when people trash others hard work because they can hide behind a keyboard.
Try our services and then if you have any issues I encourage you to contact our support desk for prompt and courteous attention.
legendary
Activity: 1064
Merit: 1000
December 29, 2014, 03:46:39 PM
#51
Your website has: No SSL proving that you're a legitimate company. No contact data, just a web-form, and you know nothing about brokerage or the stock market.

This is a valid point. If you can't bother to pay for an SSL certificate then why would anyone trust the rest of your security?
sr. member
Activity: 563
Merit: 254
Chief Operating Officer of the Panxora Group
December 29, 2014, 01:58:10 PM
#50
Oh. How bizarre You have no interest in facts.
You appear just want to say nasty unfounded things.
That's really really dark.
Unfortunate
and dark.
M.
legendary
Activity: 1064
Merit: 1000
December 29, 2014, 01:36:15 PM
#49

Your website looks like a total sham. And you're an idiot if you think that someone is going to give you 550 bitcoins.

Never underestimate the power of idiots to get other idiots to throw money at them. Alt-coin section is full of ICO scams.
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
Software Engineering is not an easy Job.
December 29, 2014, 01:30:42 PM
#48
Your website has: No SSL proving that you're a legitimate company. No contact data, just a web-form, and you know nothing about brokerage or the stock market.
sr. member
Activity: 563
Merit: 254
Chief Operating Officer of the Panxora Group
December 29, 2014, 01:22:01 PM
#47
Arbitrage is not so easy as it seems. A price difference between exchanges occurs for a reason. And that reason is low number of participants (the technical term is liquidity) in a market. So you set up accounts on a bunch of exchanges and then look for opportunities where you can buy on an exchange with a low price and then sell them immediately at a higher price. But once you are holding the tradable asset you are assuming the risk of holding that asset. So, let's say that exchange is selling an asset at a low price, like all the people who got stuck buying under priced BTC from Mr. Gox in the beginning of 2014, but they could not get those BTC out of the account. So in that case you are assuming the risk of buying that asset with the hope of selling it at a higher price. Which is fine, but the next leg of the trade, the selling has its own issues.
If an exchange looks like it has an offer at a high price, everyone watching the market will pile in and try to execute at that price. The problem is that professional traders will have direct access to the market probably through a live feed called an API or Application Programming Interface. Where their computers can snatch the good price before we ever could.
The way to make money from anything is to educate yourself carefully. Develop opinions yourself and execute carefully with only a small portion of your available assets so there's room for mistakes and learning.
And if something looks too good to be true, it probably isn't true.

Your website looks like a total sham. And you're an idiot if you think that someone is going to give you 550 bitcoins.

You aren't talking about First Global Credit are you? I'm rather new to posting to forums and it looks like you are responding to my notes to this person, but there is nothing on our site about 550 bitcoins? Could you be a little clearer about what you are referring to?
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
Software Engineering is not an easy Job.
December 29, 2014, 01:06:11 PM
#46
Arbitrage is not so easy as it seems. A price difference between exchanges occurs for a reason. And that reason is low number of participants (the technical term is liquidity) in a market. So you set up accounts on a bunch of exchanges and then look for opportunities where you can buy on an exchange with a low price and then sell them immediately at a higher price. But once you are holding the tradable asset you are assuming the risk of holding that asset. So, let's say that exchange is selling an asset at a low price, like all the people who got stuck buying under priced BTC from Mr. Gox in the beginning of 2014, but they could not get those BTC out of the account. So in that case you are assuming the risk of buying that asset with the hope of selling it at a higher price. Which is fine, but the next leg of the trade, the selling has its own issues.
If an exchange looks like it has an offer at a high price, everyone watching the market will pile in and try to execute at that price. The problem is that professional traders will have direct access to the market probably through a live feed called an API or Application Programming Interface. Where their computers can snatch the good price before we ever could.
The way to make money from anything is to educate yourself carefully. Develop opinions yourself and execute carefully with only a small portion of your available assets so there's room for mistakes and learning.
And if something looks too good to be true, it probably isn't true.

Your website looks like a total sham. And you're an idiot if you think that someone is going to give you 550 bitcoins.
sr. member
Activity: 563
Merit: 254
Chief Operating Officer of the Panxora Group
December 29, 2014, 12:13:53 PM
#45
Arbitrage is not so easy as it seems. A price difference between exchanges occurs for a reason. And that reason is low number of participants (the technical term is liquidity) in a market. So you set up accounts on a bunch of exchanges and then look for opportunities where you can buy on an exchange with a low price and then sell them immediately at a higher price. But once you are holding the tradable asset you are assuming the risk of holding that asset. So, let's say that exchange is selling an asset at a low price, like all the people who got stuck buying under priced BTC from Mr. Gox in the beginning of 2014, but they could not get those BTC out of the account. So in that case you are assuming the risk of buying that asset with the hope of selling it at a higher price. Which is fine, but the next leg of the trade, the selling has its own issues.
If an exchange looks like it has an offer at a high price, everyone watching the market will pile in and try to execute at that price. The problem is that professional traders will have direct access to the market probably through a live feed called an API or Application Programming Interface. Where their computers can snatch the good price before we ever could.
The way to make money from anything is to educate yourself carefully. Develop opinions yourself and execute carefully with only a small portion of your available assets so there's room for mistakes and learning.
And if something looks too good to be true, it probably isn't true.
member
Activity: 65
Merit: 10
December 29, 2014, 11:53:53 AM
#44
You could do arbitrage between exchanges, a new exchange just launched www.bitspark.io they have a bunch of coins that are trading at higher or lower prices than other exchanges.

Can you explain exactly how this would work in laymans terms ?
sr. member
Activity: 563
Merit: 254
Chief Operating Officer of the Panxora Group
December 29, 2014, 10:01:19 AM
#43
Hi Mining person,
If you know miners that might wish to invest their BTC, or a part thereof, we offer a referral programme for those who recommend traders. My company offers the referral payments for the life of the customer's account. www.firstglobalcredit.com.
It's just my thought that miners are sitting on stashes of BTC and maybe they don't want to spend all of them but would like to make a return on them trading stocks and commodities. (You keep the BTCs using them as margin, therefore benefiting from the profit opportunities of both.)
M.
member
Activity: 71
Merit: 10
December 29, 2014, 09:39:19 AM
#42
If you are interested in mining, and turning that to more profits, PM me. I have about 120TH, and growing, making a killing at it, with an ROI of about 90 days.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
December 28, 2014, 11:09:08 PM
#41
The only legitimate projects are few and far between. Check this out and see if you can see the potential of 2.0 platform with business oriented roadmap plan:

NobleNXT (NOXT): https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=841741.0;all
sr. member
Activity: 563
Merit: 254
Chief Operating Officer of the Panxora Group
December 28, 2014, 04:04:43 PM
#40
The link that was removed was to a story written about us on Coindesk. How bizarre that they thought it was a dangerous link. I need to start a thread, do not have one yet. Thank you for the suggestion.
Marcie
full member
Activity: 238
Merit: 100
www.secondstrade.com - 190% return Binary option
December 28, 2014, 12:57:46 PM
#39
If I might suggest www.firstglobalcredit.com
First Global Credit is the first company that recognizes the value of Bitcoins as an asset that can be used as margin to finance market trading. Your Bitcoins are not sold to go long or short a market, you maintain your position in Bitcoins and take a position in another market as well.
You can trade
  • stocks
  • stock market indices
  • Electronically Traded Funds (ETFs)
  • Gold, Silver and Palladium
There is a paper trading platform so you can get comfortable using the site. And in January we are offering commission free trading to introduce our new Active Trader Platform.
Let me know if you have any questions or would like further information?

Do you guys have a thread on the forum?
The only thread I could find was: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/first-global-credit-is-launched-815039
with links removed.
Pages:
Jump to: