Dohnjoe wrote: » I understand selling to cover the initial investment but I never get why people sell them to make peanuts or small margins knowing how profitable these can be in the long run
GreeBo wrote: » I guess thats why he kept the 5 of them?
Dohnjoe wrote: » I understand selling to cover the initial investment but I never get why people sell them to make peanuts or small margins knowing how profitable these can be in the long run Yes I get the whole trying to make a quick buck, but everyone knows the cryptocurrency stories by now - the friend who bought a couple of bitcoins for nothing back in whenever, kept them and now they are worth 80 grand. No one knows which way the market with go, but these things could be worth a couple of grand a piece in a few years. This time last year, Bitcoin was worth 700 euros, it's gone up x20. Litecoin was worth 3 euros, it's gone up almost x100. Whatever people think about cryptocurrencies, the money they can be cashed out for is very real. Based on everything we know so far, long term holding seems to be the most profitable by order of magnitudes.
papu wrote: » Today has been incredibly profitable for day trading.
banie01 wrote: » Holding is always a great way to go if you believe that past performance is an indicator. I have some HODL myself and to this day kick myself for selling my original bitcoin at €500 I try and hold on to the fact that it was a 1000% gain at the time but if i had it now... I'd be in a lambo and up to my eyes in coke and hookers! :pac::pac:
papu wrote: » Depends where you trade, but you can usually generate a report and calculate your profits from that.
papu wrote: » They could also become suddenly worthless, or all drop to a small fraction of the value they are now.
garrettod wrote: » We have absolutely no idea if there will be any profit in these in the long run, or if there's going to be any value in them at all (they could be worth zero), as none of us can predict the future.
Dohnjoe wrote: » In the situation yesterday, if you bought at X price you had absolutely no idea whether it would drop immediately or go up It wasn't based on an update, it wasn't based on an event being held in the future (buy on the rumour, sell on the news), etc However if you bought at X price but held long term .. while it seems the same 50/50 risk - historical data weighs it (slightly) in your favor e.g. over the past 100 years the stock market raises an average of 6% per year, of course it could go anywhere .. plummet down next year, it could shoot up - but historical data supports growth over the long term (sorry to labour the point but it's worth bearing in mind)
Father Hernandez wrote: » From a relative crypto newbie (bought ETH in June and have held thankfully since), I recently bought LTC on Coinbase. What's the best cause of action now? Before I transferred the ETH to Kraken and held there for a while before putting it into an ETH wallet. I'd like to transfer to Kraken (or similar) but not 100% on how to go about finding a Kraken LTC address. Also, wondering if if I were to send the coins to Kraken, would I make a small profit? Apologies for asking
Uncle Mclovin wrote: » If you cash out today you have to pay your CGT liability by 31 January 2018. If you hold and sell in January 2018, CGT doesn't need to be paid until 15th December 2018.
Martha Early Scorpion wrote: » Presumably you are referring to moving money to your bank account when you say cashing out as this is when I'd assume the CGT arises. If you sell coins but hold money in your euro wallet on the exchange then CGT wouldn't arise? Also for calculating CGT I see people talking about calculating on each trade, why would this be necessary? You capital gain is surely calculated against the money you originally invest. So if you invest 1k and across many months and multiple trades you withdraw 4k then your CGT is calculated on a figure of 4k-1270-1k = 1730 euro.
GreeBo wrote: » Anytime you dispose of an asset you are elligible CGT (either a gain or a loss) So if you sell BTC for LTC you have made either a gain or a loss on the BTC purchase and so need to file CGT return. Transferring to EUR or to your bank account is not necessary, its no different than transferring to LTC on your Coinbase account from a CGT point of view.
Martha Early Scorpion wrote: » This doesn't tally with what the dept of finance are saying. They say capital gains tax is payable on net profit from the year which tells me you just tot everything up at the end. There is not a single person going through the long winded approach above that I'd be fairly sure off.
Martha Early Scorpion wrote: » Also it's not so clear cut that CGT is due unless you withdraw the money to your bank account as this is when you are realising your actual gain.
Martha Early Scorpion wrote: » Also as the first 1270 is exempt you would not be submitting any returns on any trades below this going by your method as none would individually trigger a capital gains event. This makes it far more sensible to look at the full year and add all gains less losses, the 1270 exemption. And your initial investment.
If you are making a profit through the disposal (selling, gifting or exchanging your asset) of your cryptocurrency, you will need to declare it to Revenue for Capital Gains Tax (CGT).
flashforward wrote: » Litecoin slowly creeping down - time to change to FIAT -> wait -> Buy back Litecoin @ closer to €200??
machiavellianme wrote: » Support at 250 means nothing if it starts to move quickly. Previous crashes have told me that those buy walls disappear quickly to lower values if momentum gathers.
GreeBo wrote: » Yeah but its only likely to move quickly & gather momentum if there are large sell walls, which I dont see. Its holding pretty solid at €280 +-€5 for the last while
machiavellianme wrote: » Or one whale (which you won't see). Had similar happen to me on Saturday where a sudden spikedown sold all my Bitcoin on a stop loss set well below any support at 12000 and filled at just 11200 and it was back at 13600 just 30s later.
EagererBeaver wrote: » How would you make profit by sending your coins to another exchange? You have X coins at A. If you send them all to B you have X coins less whatever fees you've to pay.