>millions of USD sunk into Bitcoins lost big in the flash crash.
Seriously? Check MtGox more closely. Even down at ~$10 where it is now, only the extremely-new users who bought it at skyrocketing prices got screwed. And by "extremely-new" I mean extremely. The prices are still above where they were less than a week ago.
What we just saw was the bursting of the first large Bitcoin bubble, not the first depression. Depression for the people who bought during such a freakish rise, yes, but there will always be winners and losers in any economic game.
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edit: On a side note, I've found Paypal's "excuse" for not allowing transactions with Bitcoin merchants a weak one at best. Why, then, have they allowed exchanges with Linden merchants like VirWoX for the past three and a half years?
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edit2: wow, this article gets worse and worse:
>Mt. Gox is the world's largest bitcoin exchange, but it's suffered from major liquidity issues in recent weeks. The recent massive inflationary drop is also a sign of poor controls at the exchange.
Two questions: 1) why did Mt. Gox suffer? They're a trade tool, all the action has only been good for them, to the tune of 0.65% of each trade! 2) they're an exchange. If they wish to exchange at market price, what "controls" would you expect them to put in place? People pay what they want to pay, that's the way MtGox has always worked, they're just an intermediary.
It does undermine it as a useful currency though. Can't set prices in bitcoin, can't safely hold money in bitcoin, can't safely sign future contracts in bitcoin.
I'm not sure how much of that was going on in the first place, but isn't it the goal?
I think the OP was referring to the Dwolla API issues that MtGox was having. With Dwolla being their paypal-alternative, people got kind of spooked when suddenly they couldn't move money in and out of the market earlier this week and no answers were immediately available.
For what it's worth, MtGox claimed Dwolla switched their API around for their "Grid" product without any forewarning (big round of applause for oAuth, everyone!), and got the API issues fixed a couple of days ago. They've been more upfront and communicative ever since.
There is a lot of assumption going on in this article.
When you're talking about movements in currency crosses, as the article does in focusing on the BTC/USD rate, there are a bunch of different reasons that can move it. At the core though, there are two sides to a large drop in the value of a Bitcoin vs. the USD. You can have a large number of people wanting to dump BTC, OR you can have a large number of people wanting to acquire USD.
Note that the article itself talks about the turmoil in the US equity markets on the same day. This usually creates a demand for USD as people require it to meet margin calls or pay off debt which is denominated in USD. I'd bet on this being the primary cause. In fact, if you look at the USD vs. any other currency (EUR, JPY, etc) it rose in value against just about everything today.
The other reason, which I consider less likely, is that people decided to drop BTC en masse for some other reason which is as yet unknown. This appears to be much less likely, although it can't be completely counted out.
In short, the USD rose against just about everything today, and the BTC market seems to have been affected more than most--primarily, I'm assuming, due to the relative illiquidity of that specific market in general.
I am inclined to think that the fundamentals of bitcoin are very good, it'll be interesting to see how the price rebounds after this correction, I tend to think with all the trolls happening in the forum that some big players want in big time.
It doesn't feel like a depression when it was preceded by an incredible rally. One month ago I sold my first BitCoins for 2.7€. Four days ago I sold some for 20€. When I got into mining, I thought even 1€ was incredibly high. Who cares if they went down from 20€ a little - the exchange rate is still incredible.
I think 30$ was simply a very attractive exchange rate, so a lot of people decided to sell. That's all there is to it.
Though I have to say it is fun to experience this with BitCoins. There certainly was a feeling of "damn it, sell now or wait for even higher prices???". But as far as I am concerned, it is still more like a game, so I am not depressed if I lose out on the highest prices.
I sold my 5 BTC at $30/coin, and walked with $149.96 after fees. It certainly felt like a bubble, and I'm glad I got out when I did, even if it was only for spare change in the scheme of things.
Take Silk Road, for example -- the topic of a recent Gawker piece. An IP accesses this site, which is known for selling narcotics illegal in the U.S. If this is a user's direct IP, anyone who can sniff the traffic of the site can trace that user back to their home address, assuming cooperation of the internet service provider.
However, if you first route your IP through Tor -- an anonymizing service, you can make it extremely difficult for anyone to trace you.
Silk Road is only available through Tor; it can't be accessed from the clearnet unless you use something like tor2web.
If you want more anonymity in Bitcoin, run it through Tor and have the setting noirc='1' in your ~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf. Also, Tor is more anonymous for you if you act at least as a middle node, what also helps the network.
I suspect #4 Getting Money In or Out is the only one that matters. There have been problems getting USD into Mt.Gox for most of the week. Now with the weekend upon us the trickle of new funds has become a drip. There are no shortage of people in the forums looking to buy bitcoin with paypal, trying to get in before all the bank wires on Monday. I expect it will be back up to around 20 USD by Tuesday. Regardless of the cause, big swings like this don't exactly help it's cause in becoming a widely used currency.
The exchange rate stopped going up shortly after The Silk Road closed to new users. It started dropping soon after. TSR was the most compelling and publicized use of bitcoins, and I expect that if the site re-opens there'll be another round of publicity and bitcoins will rally.
So sure, probably some component of the initial rise was a bubble, but it's important to remember that the actual utility of bitcoins also went down significantly preceding the price drop.
I really doubt TSR was a significant factor in this.
Perhaps people are worried about Gavin giving his CIA talk in two days. Perhaps Russians were funneling money again (like with egold when it was shut down) and completed their trial run. Perhaps some investor got wind of this cool thing called Bitcoin and told his assistant to buy in $150k (that alone would move the price +$10), then sold a week later. Or perhaps it was the non-stop increasing media coverage of Bitcoin in the past month. Or perhaps it was the weekend when it's harder to get money into MtGox and the psychological perfect storm of speculators manifested.
TSR was around since February, with steady growth up until the recent spike when they closed to new users. Perhaps that was a factor, but I doubt it was a significant one. I imagine most people who bought coins don't have Tor installed.
As far as I understand bitcoin (very very little) is mostly being bought/mined by people who like the idea as an investment/experiment. That makes it a kind of goofy commodity at the moment.
I think to get some stability and potential longevity bitcoin needs to be used more like a currency. IE be used for buying and selling stuff. That's a difficult piece of this puzzle. I can't think of any possible catalyst for it.
Can anyone explain to me how bitcoin might become something that a large number of people use to buy & sell goods and services?
Basically, it's great for the black market. For the US, that means primarily drugs and gambling. That's why the price shot up after the Wired article about Silk Road: A whole bunch of people wanted to get Bitcoins to buy drugs online. In some countries the black market is even more important, because it's the only way to get certain necessities. The fact that bitcoins are being used as an investment vehicle right now is depressing, since the world desperately needs a form of digital cash.
It's much more convenient to use than existing methods of money transfer. Once you already have some BTC, that is - getting BTC might be a bit too cumbersome at the moment.
For example I bought some T-Shirts at SquareWear.biz. Upon checkout I get told a bitcoin address I enter into my client to transfer the required amount of BTC. A couple of seconds later squarewear knows I transferred the BTC and all is done. No registration with a payment processor required.
Another example: in my blog I once offered 0.1 BTC to the first five commentators on a blog post. Try that with other payment methods. Maybe money wires would work, but then not internationally without high fees.
"a major improvement would be for Bitcoin exchanges to implement mandatory market closures if the currency value dropped below a threshold"
Would anyone actually exchange real world goods for bitcoins if the exchanges close following a sudden drop? Am I missing something, or would this just drive the value (temporarily) to zero?
I guess these fluctuations will go on until there are many more interfaces between bitcoin and the rest of the world (ie places where you can earn and spend bitcoins).
The money is only 'lost' if A) they bought BTC at > $19 B) they did A AND sold today, or C) the price never recovers to $28 USD.
I would assume given the types of people that BTC would appeal to that they presume the US will persue a very expansionary monetary policy for the foreseeable future. Maybe the gov't announced news that would suggest raising interest rates or balancing the budget.
It could also be a sign that people are starting to do hedge fund type operations with BTC. If you wanted to invest heavily in BTC using a few hundred K to depress the price may be advantageous given the instability of the currency.
[+] [-] Groxx|15 years ago|reply
Seriously? Check MtGox more closely. Even down at ~$10 where it is now, only the extremely-new users who bought it at skyrocketing prices got screwed. And by "extremely-new" I mean extremely. The prices are still above where they were less than a week ago.
What we just saw was the bursting of the first large Bitcoin bubble, not the first depression. Depression for the people who bought during such a freakish rise, yes, but there will always be winners and losers in any economic game.
---
edit: On a side note, I've found Paypal's "excuse" for not allowing transactions with Bitcoin merchants a weak one at best. Why, then, have they allowed exchanges with Linden merchants like VirWoX for the past three and a half years?
---
edit2: wow, this article gets worse and worse:
>Mt. Gox is the world's largest bitcoin exchange, but it's suffered from major liquidity issues in recent weeks. The recent massive inflationary drop is also a sign of poor controls at the exchange.
Two questions: 1) why did Mt. Gox suffer? They're a trade tool, all the action has only been good for them, to the tune of 0.65% of each trade! 2) they're an exchange. If they wish to exchange at market price, what "controls" would you expect them to put in place? People pay what they want to pay, that's the way MtGox has always worked, they're just an intermediary.
[+] [-] netcan|15 years ago|reply
I'm not sure how much of that was going on in the first place, but isn't it the goal?
[+] [-] joezydeco|15 years ago|reply
For what it's worth, MtGox claimed Dwolla switched their API around for their "Grid" product without any forewarning (big round of applause for oAuth, everyone!), and got the API issues fixed a couple of days ago. They've been more upfront and communicative ever since.
[+] [-] bastiat|15 years ago|reply
I believe you mean to say 'financial' here, in place of economic.
[+] [-] jasonkolb|15 years ago|reply
When you're talking about movements in currency crosses, as the article does in focusing on the BTC/USD rate, there are a bunch of different reasons that can move it. At the core though, there are two sides to a large drop in the value of a Bitcoin vs. the USD. You can have a large number of people wanting to dump BTC, OR you can have a large number of people wanting to acquire USD.
Note that the article itself talks about the turmoil in the US equity markets on the same day. This usually creates a demand for USD as people require it to meet margin calls or pay off debt which is denominated in USD. I'd bet on this being the primary cause. In fact, if you look at the USD vs. any other currency (EUR, JPY, etc) it rose in value against just about everything today.
The other reason, which I consider less likely, is that people decided to drop BTC en masse for some other reason which is as yet unknown. This appears to be much less likely, although it can't be completely counted out.
In short, the USD rose against just about everything today, and the BTC market seems to have been affected more than most--primarily, I'm assuming, due to the relative illiquidity of that specific market in general.
[+] [-] adrianwaj|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Tichy|15 years ago|reply
I think 30$ was simply a very attractive exchange rate, so a lot of people decided to sell. That's all there is to it.
Though I have to say it is fun to experience this with BitCoins. There certainly was a feeling of "damn it, sell now or wait for even higher prices???". But as far as I am concerned, it is still more like a game, so I am not depressed if I lose out on the highest prices.
[+] [-] palish|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Mithrandir|15 years ago|reply
However, if you first route your IP through Tor -- an anonymizing service, you can make it extremely difficult for anyone to trace you.
Silk Road is only available through Tor; it can't be accessed from the clearnet unless you use something like tor2web.
[+] [-] gasull|15 years ago|reply
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Anonymity
If you want more anonymity in Bitcoin, run it through Tor and have the setting noirc='1' in your ~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf. Also, Tor is more anonymous for you if you act at least as a middle node, what also helps the network.
[+] [-] yaix|15 years ago|reply
>> "(Source: Google Images)"
What? Does Google Images offer own original content?
[+] [-] ltamake|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ahi|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bdr|15 years ago|reply
So sure, probably some component of the initial rise was a bubble, but it's important to remember that the actual utility of bitcoins also went down significantly preceding the price drop.
[+] [-] shazow|15 years ago|reply
Perhaps people are worried about Gavin giving his CIA talk in two days. Perhaps Russians were funneling money again (like with egold when it was shut down) and completed their trial run. Perhaps some investor got wind of this cool thing called Bitcoin and told his assistant to buy in $150k (that alone would move the price +$10), then sold a week later. Or perhaps it was the non-stop increasing media coverage of Bitcoin in the past month. Or perhaps it was the weekend when it's harder to get money into MtGox and the psychological perfect storm of speculators manifested.
TSR was around since February, with steady growth up until the recent spike when they closed to new users. Perhaps that was a factor, but I doubt it was a significant one. I imagine most people who bought coins don't have Tor installed.
[+] [-] philfreo|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] netcan|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mortehu|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Tichy|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] netcan|15 years ago|reply
I think to get some stability and potential longevity bitcoin needs to be used more like a currency. IE be used for buying and selling stuff. That's a difficult piece of this puzzle. I can't think of any possible catalyst for it.
Can anyone explain to me how bitcoin might become something that a large number of people use to buy & sell goods and services?
[+] [-] pemulis|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Tichy|15 years ago|reply
For example I bought some T-Shirts at SquareWear.biz. Upon checkout I get told a bitcoin address I enter into my client to transfer the required amount of BTC. A couple of seconds later squarewear knows I transferred the BTC and all is done. No registration with a payment processor required.
Another example: in my blog I once offered 0.1 BTC to the first five commentators on a blog post. Try that with other payment methods. Maybe money wires would work, but then not internationally without high fees.
[+] [-] edoloughlin|15 years ago|reply
Would anyone actually exchange real world goods for bitcoins if the exchanges close following a sudden drop? Am I missing something, or would this just drive the value (temporarily) to zero?
[+] [-] Amincd|15 years ago|reply
The drop is also not the first bitcoin has had. It's been highly volatile since the beginning.
This is just sensationalism.
[+] [-] perlgeek|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] fleitz|15 years ago|reply
I would assume given the types of people that BTC would appeal to that they presume the US will persue a very expansionary monetary policy for the foreseeable future. Maybe the gov't announced news that would suggest raising interest rates or balancing the budget.
It could also be a sign that people are starting to do hedge fund type operations with BTC. If you wanted to invest heavily in BTC using a few hundred K to depress the price may be advantageous given the instability of the currency.
[+] [-] shii|15 years ago|reply