Woke Hogan wrote: » I work with a few lads who invested in crypto currencies last year, and they're all regretting it now. I can't help but laugh at those fools, you could see it was a bubble from a mile away.
callaway92 wrote: » Thank you captain hindsight
Slideways wrote: » ........... One of them was worth almost 900k Aussie dollars at the height of the bubble........His investment is now worth less than 3k..............
Woke Hogan wrote: » Grow up.
Aongus Von Bismarck wrote: » A complete scam of course, and it just goes to shows what happens when large amounts of people who don't understand economics, the creation of wealth, and the systems behind it, attempt to 'get rich quick'. That said, not everyone lost money. Over 90% of people did. I made some money off Bitcoin completely by chance. A number of us here at the bank in Frankfurt bought some of them a number of years back. We had intended to give them to one of C-Suite in the bank as a joke present - the 'future of money'. We didn't however, as he died of a massive heart attack before we had the opportunity to do so. Anyway, we forgot about them, until last December, where we saw that each coin was valued at over 10k dollars a pop. We cashed them all in at 14700k a pop, which wasn't the height of the bubble, but no point getting greedy with this sort of thing, and ending up being a bag-holder/owner of worthless digital 'beany babies'. I paid the required tax on the profits, and was able to purchase a small holiday home in West Cork with the proceeds. I also had enough left over to purchase a golf course membership down there, as well as a Paul Henry painting for the kitchen. So all-in-all, a pleasant experience. Don't even bother reading about it these days. There's this idea that those of us who work in traditional banking are terrified of bitcoin. We aren't. It's silly libertarians playing silly games with silly virtual money.
seamus wrote: » The concept is sound, the fact that it's a pure free-market unregulated currency means that it's always going to be abused by investors/speculators. Even if bitcoin were ever to become a real currency, it will be forever intensely unstable and unreliable.
JohnnyFlash wrote: » How is the concept sound, dude? Bitcoin mining is an environmental disaster (using way more electricity than the entire island of Ireland), the scene is awash with wash trading, spoof orders, painting the tape, and other scams that have been banned in other markets for decades. It's slow, expensive to use, if you forget your password then you've lost your bitcoin forever, theft is rife. It's one of the most retrograde technological developments ever created.
pleas advice wrote: » I don't know what a blockchain is
Augeo wrote: » I'm struggling to see how that's possible tbh. We aren't 99.7% off peak values.
Slideways wrote: » I was having the porridge this morning with a few colleagues, and the chat came around to cryptocurrency. Turns out they all got roasted buying bitcoin, Ethereum and other coins during the bubble in November and December of last year. Two of the lads are going to sell their remaining coins this week, and put the whole thing down to getting greedy and falling for a classic pyramid scheme. One other lad (a hard-living Scot) was threatening to track down an ex-colleague of ours and ‘put the slipphery wee kunt in a grave’ for talking the group into buying these coins in the first place. One of them was worth almost 900k Aussie dollars at the height of the bubble. He was boasting back in December about buying a yacht, moving to Puerto Rico, and shacking up with some local bird with his epic crypto gains. His investment is now worth less than 3k.That’s shocking stuff. You’d hear very little these days about the space in the papers, or on the telly. Did anyone here lose the arse of their trousers gambling on these coins, and did you learn a lesson? Has it any future at all? Was it greed, stupidity, or a mixture of both that caused young lads to throw their savings into this stuff? You’d have to stroke your chin and wonder what they were thinking.
Jack Moore wrote: » I don’t u derstand this Bg has fallen from a peak of 17 k to a current 5.5 k so how has he lost 99.7%
Ipso wrote: » It depends when he bought, he might have got in very early. And he may be looking at losses the way people looked at house process back in the day.
Jack Moore wrote: » No I get how he got up to 900k But 900k at peak is worth 300k now
Ipso wrote: » Right, I get you. Unless his broker charges "miscellaneous" fees.