Pintman Paddy Losty wrote: » Don't be ridiculous. Pintman Paddy Losty is here to give you guys some free advice. Don't heed it at your peril, as I have called this right consistently. Sell your BTC now. There is a serious correction coming. This entire bubble is being fueled by Tether and almost entirely by tether. The big long d1ck of the federal government is about to fcuk the sh1t out of them very soon and this whole sorry mess is coming down. Get out while you can!!!
Blowheads wrote: » 8.. including the dot and pence or you rounded? Good lord
el Fenomeno wrote: » What's the best / most cost-effective way to turn your BTC on Binance into cash and withdraw to my bank account?
cnocbui wrote: » You are kidding yourself ... probably. I'm sure people told themselves that in droves the latter stages of the 2017 bull run, but it's not what they did after the crash happened. The fear caused by that crash knocked the optimism out of most people and they clutched their fiat even more tightly in fear. Warren Buffet said 'be fearful when others are greedy and be greedy when others are feraful'. It sounds simple and easy but the second part is, very, very hard to do.
Bruno Mannheim wrote: » 8 figures
Irish_rat wrote: » How much we talking, tens of thousands I'd imagine
grindle wrote: » KYC, upload a utility bill with address
cnocbui wrote: » I wasn't being critical or trying to dissuade you, I have held bitcoin for a while, I was trying to say that buying after a huge plunge in the price of an asset is a lot more difficult to do, than it sounds in theory. I have actually done it, and potentially profited by it, but from my own experience, it's hard.
Truckermal wrote: » Trying to buy on Coinbase but it's saying my account is restricted.
BrandonBay86 wrote: » Non stop to 100k. 37% higher now than at 10am on Monday. Be lucky if a dip brings us back to that even.
Thargor wrote: » Big sell-off coming at 40k or is it powering ahead to 50 do you think?
cnocbui wrote: » I wasn't being critical or trying to dissuade you, I have held bitcoin for a while, I was trying to say that buying after a huge plange in the price of an asset is a lot more difficult to do, than it sounds in theory. I have actually done it, and potentially profited by it, but from my own experience, it's hard.
Jafin wrote: » Meh, I'm still fairly new to all of it and have invested only a minor amount compared to others in here I'm sure, so I'm not too bothered either way. If it keeps trending up and we don't have a big crash then cool, my investment is still gaining profit. If it does crash I'll pump a bit more money into it for the future which is also cool. If there is a huge crash it won't dissuade me from crypto or anything, I know it'll swing back up eventually even if it takes years. I'm in it for the long haul and I'm not prone to cashing out/buying on a whim.
Dohnjoe wrote: » Old guesswork: Wall street bonuses, Chinese new year New guesswork: Stimulus cheques
unkel wrote: » I can't see it either. Will they be faster than say the likes of Revolut? And use equally impossible to beat rates (interbank rates) and zero fees?
cnocbui wrote: » I must be missing something, because this didn't impress me at all. A lot of blah,blah,blah about sending payments globaly, cheaply and fast, in US$, currently in pretty trivial amounts.
makeorbrake wrote: » I'm not sure I follow? I'm currently getting raped on a monthly basis receiving a payment from N.America with 4% loss. As regards trivial amounts, he hasn't even started yet.
Gonzovision wrote: » I'm sure many here are fans of Preston Pysh and the TIP podcast. This weeks episode featured Jack Mallers and discussions on the Bitcoin lightning network, and how it will disrupt the big player sin the payment industry.https://www.theinvestorspodcast.com/bitcoin-fundamentals/btc007-bitcoin-disrupting-payment-clearing-houses-w-jack-mallers/ Strike will be coming out in Europe pretty soon and if you haven't registered already I'd be grateful of you could use my referral!https://global.strike.me/?kid=1EKNFJ