The contracts are 60-minute forwards; you are agreeing to buy/sell Bitcoin at the current price (determined by the CoinDesk BPI) but 60 minutes from now. At that time the Bitcoin is transferred from the seller to the buyer, and the strike price (denominated in $) is paid in Bitcoin at the current price. The net effect is that the seller nets a small amount of Bitcoin if the price falls, giving them an amount equivalent to the original exchange rate. If the price rises the buyer nets a small amount. This is essentially a way of locking-in the rate now if for various reasons (waiting on blockchain confirmation for example) you cannot immediately sell off a parcel of Bitcoin. This would be very useful to payment operators, ATM operators, and merchants, for example.
The order book right now is shallow and comprised of our own funds; however we are in the process of onboarding several interested parties so I know that will improve in time.
Showing more before signup is an excellent suggestion; if you are not averse to submitting an email address you can try the paper trading site with 100 fake Bitcoins at paper-trade-bitfuture.com . Thanks for the feedback!
Our previous versions were solicited to friends and family, people who were going to sign up anyway and who knew roughly that we were trying to build a platform for Bitcoin derivatives. I suppose I've been way too focused on getting the double-entry bookkeeping and other accounting layers perfect to think "would I sign up for this landing page". So yes, this is very helpful feedback (even if it does make me feel a bit silly).
Previous feedback had been that our tutorials were extremely long and that our interface was too cluttered; I think it's probable we swung too far in the opposite direction and need to find a healthy medium.
I don't think it's a suspicious idea if you start to think about the problem that volatility causes with Bitcoin adoption. There are many derivatives platforms out there now beginning to grow but most cater to offshore sophisticated investors and speculators. We are trying to build a market around a derivative product that would be eminently useful to Bitcoin businesses and make serious steps towards other derivative products that would smooth out the bumps in the Bitcoin price.
[+] [-] wmf|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jboggan|11 years ago|reply
The order book right now is shallow and comprised of our own funds; however we are in the process of onboarding several interested parties so I know that will improve in time.
Showing more before signup is an excellent suggestion; if you are not averse to submitting an email address you can try the paper trading site with 100 fake Bitcoins at paper-trade-bitfuture.com . Thanks for the feedback!
[+] [-] eglover|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jboggan|11 years ago|reply
Previous feedback had been that our tutorials were extremely long and that our interface was too cluttered; I think it's probable we swung too far in the opposite direction and need to find a healthy medium.
I don't think it's a suspicious idea if you start to think about the problem that volatility causes with Bitcoin adoption. There are many derivatives platforms out there now beginning to grow but most cater to offshore sophisticated investors and speculators. We are trying to build a market around a derivative product that would be eminently useful to Bitcoin businesses and make serious steps towards other derivative products that would smooth out the bumps in the Bitcoin price.
Thanks for the feedback.
[+] [-] elijahchancey|11 years ago|reply