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I’ve changed my mind on Bitcoin

43 points| davefreiburger | 5 years ago |gradually.co | reply

65 comments

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[+] aphextron|5 years ago|reply
We're in a world where nothing means anything anymore. Stock valuations are meaningless. Take Alibaba for instance. What exactly are you getting when you buy a share of BABA? Voting rights? Dividends? Liquidation value? Nope, none of that. You're getting a meaningless piece of paper that hopefully everyone else agrees is worth something in the future.

How about Chewy. 30 billion market cap for a random ecommerce site running a multibillion dollar loss for 5 years? Sure why not. Or Quantumscape. 20 billion for a battery company with zero revenue that doesn't even have a factory? Of course. Money is a complete fiction now. In this environment, if the investing class agrees that Bitcoin is worth $35k, then it is.

[+] j_walter|5 years ago|reply
Might as well through TSLA into the absurd valuation sphere...PE ratio north of 1000 and projected to be >100 for at least the next 3-4 years. Competitors with PE ratios of 10-40 that produce 50X the vehicles...TSLA market cap higher than the top 9 car makers combined. Musk went from being worth 27B to 185B in a year. The valuation makes no sense...sure long term they could be a giant, but so many other car companies are producing electric vehicles and new battery technology now their competitive edge in the space may not last long.

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/14/tesla-valuation-more-than-ni...

[+] amelius|5 years ago|reply
Yes. The economy is broken. Democracy is broken. Journalism is sort of broken. Healthcare is broken. What a world we live in.

EDIT: I even forgot about the climate.

[+] slickrick216|5 years ago|reply
Yeah pretty much. In a world where the following scenario is actively working all bets are off really.

Buy BTC convert to renBTC (skip this by just buying renBTC on an exchange if you can) Put in keeperdao and earn ~19-30% APY. Claim profits as ROOK convert to renBTC put them back into keeperdao and compound keep your exposure to BTC.

On a personal note I was a doubter for a long time. Now not so much given the money printing of the past year. The past year every time I read about NFTs I think they are stupid. This is why I’m forcing myself to research and experiment with them as I don’t want to let my doubts about things get in my way again.

[+] Aunche|5 years ago|reply
You're conflating financial value and the abstract concept of value. Financial value is really just a function of supply and demand. Food and clean water may be a lot more important than megayachts, but they're also also far more abundant than megayachts.

It happens that maximizing financial value also does a good job of improving people's lives, so we treat as truth. Right now, we're starting to see this fall apart as certain valuations stop making sense and certain negative externalities start coming to light. That said, I still think in general, valuations tend to be more right than they are wrong.

[+] tshaddox|5 years ago|reply
This has always been the case for all items of value. You might just consider some of those things "meaningful" if people have been valuing them for a very long time (like coins or other physical items which represent a standardized currency) or if the reason people value them is closely tied to features of nature which we aren't likely to change in the imminent future (like requiring scarce things such as food and shelter to survive). But at the end of the day, people are still choosing to value those things and that is all there is to it.
[+] rudiger|5 years ago|reply
From the article: If Bitcoin's market capitalization were to match that of gold, it would be worth over $500,000 a coin. This is why some investors are so bullish on Bitcoin.

Perhaps it's more accurate to say that investors are increasingly bearish on the dollar.

[+] centimeter|5 years ago|reply
These are all inevitable consequences of artificially cheap debt due to USD "printing". The Cantillon Effect has weird consequences. Bullshit companies can be worth billions, and people will rationally flee the dollar (into e.g. BTC).

Bitcoin has a much more plausible value proposition than most of these bullshit companies. Conflating the anomalously high value of BTC with the anomalously high value of companies is a category error. http://jpkoning.blogspot.com/2018/10/bitcoin-and-bubble-theo... https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2013/04/bitcoin-is-...

[+] HatchedLake721|5 years ago|reply
When and how was this ever different?

Isn’t it how trade works since the early days of humanity? We value things, whether it’s sea shells, sheep or a legal entity in 2021 with 10,000 staff and exchange it for what we think it’s worth?

[+] stunt|5 years ago|reply
Illusion of wealth
[+] fractalf|5 years ago|reply
I've also changed my mind about bitcoin. As an earlier believer an enthusiast, I cannot see bitcoin as anything more than a race to spend energy for nothing. It doesnxt scale it's not sustainable, it will fail. I still believe in cryptocoins though just not bitxoin..
[+] onepointsixC|5 years ago|reply
Same boat here. I remember all the enthusiasm users had when they were able to spend bitcoins to buy something. The excitement when a new vendor added it as a payment method. Now it seems that the space is occupied by those who would sneer at those who spent thousands of bitcoins to buy a pizza. It seems the only thing that there is to do with bitcoin is to hodl and hope you become a millionaire.
[+] yrral|5 years ago|reply
This is a rehash of a previous post of mine regarding electricity consumption:

Back in the days where all our electricity came from fossil fuels, I completely agree that marginal electricity usage was bad for the environment. However I think that thought has persisted with us even though it is no longer true 100% of the time. With renewables sometimes the marginal cost of electricity to our environment is near 0 or even negative (eg, during periods of higher winds and lower demand.)

I predict that in the future as bitcoin mining becomes more and more of an efficiency game that you will see bitcoin mining be kind of a load balancer the grid, effectively turning off during peak demand (or low supply) times and contributing to the base load during regular times.

For example, it may even help the economics of building new wind plants. Eg, currently it may not be profitable to build a new wind plant because base load is too low that the excess power generated would need to be sold off at 0 or even negative prices. However if bitcoin mining could be turned on during these times and off during periods of high demand, there will need to be fewer peaker plants in operation and it would positively affect the economics of opening a new wind plant.

Bitcoin mining only cares about the cost of electricity at a given time, it is not like most other electricity demands that are very time based. With the large variance of electricity generation by renewables, I think bitcoin can in the future help smooth demand according to the real supply/demand curve.

It's kind of like a different implementation of the Tesla utility grid batteries. Instead of deploying power, you force the grid to build more renewable capacity (that the miners are paying for) that you use except in peak periods, where you turn off and effectively provide the grid with more power.

[+] j_walter|5 years ago|reply
What about a crypto that is working to change from PoW to PoS like Ethereum is attempting to do. I agree Bitcoin is wasting country like amounts of energy right now...
[+] cjflog|5 years ago|reply
Sometimes spending more energy is a net win even though it's more energy expensive (cars vs horses).
[+] kneel|5 years ago|reply
Energy consumed is security in the network. Like a giant force field.
[+] hehehaha|5 years ago|reply
This so much. I absolutely believe in digital currency and blockchain (albeit not current implementations). However, they need to tie it to something tangible and it needs to be completely detached from USD.
[+] mpalczewski|5 years ago|reply
“There is an old story about the market craze in sardine trading when the sardines disappeared from their traditional waters in Monterey, California. The commodity traders bid them up and the price of a can of sardines soared. One day a buyer decided to treat himself to an expensive meal and actually opened a can and started eating. He immediately became ill and told the seller the sardines were no good. The seller said, “You don’t understand. These are not eating sardines, they are trading sardines.” - Seth Klarman
[+] nickysielicki|5 years ago|reply
The game theory of end-game bitcoin is interesting and doesn't get enough attention.

I haven't seen a good response to this paper: https://www.cs.princeton.edu/~smattw/CKWN-CCS16.pdf

[+] tromp|5 years ago|reply
This was recently discussed on bitcointalk [1]. Some quotes from that thread:

> Because when you have mined a full block and there is a backlog, the difference in income between mining the next block (all full of pending transactions) and going backwards and remining the prior block to take its fees is small (and comes at a cost of decreased chance of eventually being in the longest chain). This is particularly true because new transactions that are arriving cannot be included in the prior block if it is remined.

> A supply cap requires a block reward dwindling to insignificance (long before it reaches 0). So the significant mining reward must come from large fees. Mining stability requires a steady backlog of fee paying transactions, which in turn requires a highly constrained block size.

[1] https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5306354.0

[+] dwaltrip|5 years ago|reply
I was curious, here's what the abstract says:

> Bitcoin provides two incentives for miners: block rewards and transaction fees. The former accounts for the vast majority of miner revenues at the beginning of the system, but it is expected to transition to the latter as the block rewards dwindle. There has been an implicit belief that whether miners are paid by block rewards or transaction fees does not affect the security of the block chain.

> We show that this is not the case. Our key insight is that with only transaction fees, the variance of the block reward is very high due to the exponentially distributed block arrival time, and it becomes attractive to fork a “wealthy” block to “steal” the rewards therein. We show that this results in an equilibrium with undesirable properties for Bitcoin’s security and performance, and even non-equilibria in some circumstances.

[+] franky47|5 years ago|reply
> “But Nick, Bitcoin doesn’t have any intrinsic value!” Well, guess what? Neither does gold which has a $10 trillion market capitalization!

Gold has many applications beyond its monetary association. Its electrical and chemical properties make it a key element in building circuit boards, ironically, for the machines that make Bitcoin possible.

[+] dwaltrip|5 years ago|reply
What portion of gold's value comes from non-monetary demand (e.g. electronics, jewelry, etc.)?

A few years ago I tried to answer that question and I remember getting a pretty low value, something like 10% or 20%.

[+] dcolkitt|5 years ago|reply
I think a lot of Americans are naturally skeptical of crypto because they’ve never lived with capital controls in living memory. But for much of the world, the ability to hide and move arbitrarily large amounts of money is ridiculously valuable.
[+] durkie|5 years ago|reply
what's the value in holding bitcoin versus any other cryptocurrency? genuine question here.

i've never understood the value of bitcoin because while bitcoins themselves are scarce, cryptocurrencies aren't.

[+] woeirua|5 years ago|reply
The only problem is that the value of said money fluctuates drastically over time. If Bitcoin were stable in value it would be immensely useful as a currency... alas it is not.
[+] Traster|5 years ago|reply
I feel like we have a lot of discussion of bitcoin, and none of it makes me any more informed. There are a lot of people with opinions, there are a lot of people who want to build personal brands. I wrote out a whole set of critiques of the points he raises, but I deleted them in the end- I do think we're re-hashing the same ground as before. If you beleive in the argument of collective delusion as value then that's fine, you haven't convinced me.
[+] domano|5 years ago|reply
I see nothing substantial here, since there were many peaks and crashes before. Is this from someone i should know?

Meanwhile there is a good summary on the influence Tether issuance has on BTC on the front page, which has some sources. Not that it is the definite truth, but having some sources instead of just "Well, there was another peak so i guess Bitcoin is alright after all" is more valuable to me.

[+] cambalache|5 years ago|reply
Is there a future for a decentralized, secure, private, energy-conscious virtual currency? Right now it seems to me the options are A)The tulip-mania like we have right now, and those are the best of the lot. B) A 'boring' old fashioned currency controlled by the guys with the big guns and spy agencies.
[+] OscarCunningham|5 years ago|reply
Are there economic models that derive the values of assets like gold and bitcoin from fundamentals? What do they say about where the value ultimately derives from?
[+] foxrob92|5 years ago|reply
There's multiple theories of value.

Labour theory of value contends that the value of an object depends on the "congealed human labour" in that object (e.g. a chair is worth more than its constituent timber because the chair requires you exert additional labour on that timber).

Intrinsic theory of value says that some objects have some objective value, inherent in the object (or as a property of that object, like mass).

Subjective theory of value basically says "value is in the eye of the beholder".

There is also exchange theory of value, which is similar to subjective value. An object has a value decided by what it can be exchanged with (e.g. 2 square metres of linen might be worth the same as 1 coat, even though the coat only has 1 square metre of linen in it)

[+] bugBunny|5 years ago|reply
Did not read the article, but the main issue with cryptocurrencies I see is that everyone is buying them so they can sell it later when the price goes up.
[+] cjflog|5 years ago|reply
That's a feature not a bug (of BTC anyway). A deflationary store of value....has value.
[+] scubbo|5 years ago|reply
Why is that an issue? That's exactly why people buy shares.
[+] data_spy|5 years ago|reply
At least the article didn't say, "I'm not bullish on bitcoin, but I'm bullish on blockchain"
[+] hehehaha|5 years ago|reply
When will the crypto proponents realize that crypto is not taken seriously BECAUSE it is $30,000?
[+] cwkoss|5 years ago|reply
Tell that to the institutions that are starting to pour 100s of millions of dollars into it.
[+] geraldbauer|5 years ago|reply
Bitcoin the new gold (or store of value - hint: did you know? gold is a mineral - that's not subjective but objective)!? Sorry, Bitcoin is comedy gold! The internet of money! LOL.

The bitcoin ponzi and the austrian economics bullshit (e.g. value fluctuates based on demand - it's all subjective!) to the max lies get ever bigger. For a good summary published just a couple of days ago of the "state-of-the-fraud", see Why Bitcoin is a Ponzi (Learn how the Investment Fraud Works) [1]

PS: The damage to our planet is not subjective but objective and very very real [2]. Of course, you find nothing in this "Bitcoin Changed My Mind" about the CO2 footprint or the electronic waste etc.

[1]: https://openblockchains.github.io/bitcoin-ponzi [2]: https://digiconomist.net/bitcoin-energy-consumption