bfa1509 wrote: » WTF! (BTC/Eur, 15min bars)
FileNotFound wrote: » Spot orders???? At 25k prob a load of them filled quick and gave a boost back up???
OEP wrote: » What do you mean?
HGVRHKYY wrote: » For all models and predictions for this cycle which exceed a minimum of $100k to be invalidated so badly
Piehead wrote: » Buying a few grand of that Dogecoin on Revolut for sheets and gigglez.
Jackben75 wrote: » delusional. BTC isn't going away, what we are experiencing is a whole lot of FUD. China banning mining is a non issue, the miners will move and are moving as we speak. As for banks banning crypto transactions, story is done to death, ultimately they may feel a little more uncomfortable with the scenario but any ban won't succeed. The market will bounce back. As for 100 bucks btc, not a chance, i would be surprised if it went below 20k. Hold firm people. Take a break and forget about it for a while. Your mental health will thank you.
Mad_maxx wrote: » any views on Coinbase public listing ? , is it a solid proxy for bitcoin ?
namloc1980 wrote: » Don't use Revolut for serious investing in crypto. It's not owned by you separately but pooled with other investors. No wallet address. Grand for a little dabble but not anything more. From their own website:The cryptocurrency we buy for you is held in a ‘virtual account’ that also holds cryptocurrencies for other Revolut customers. You will not have a separate cryptocurrency account. You can use the Revolut app to see the amount of cryptocurrency we’re holding for you. There won’t be any contractual relationship between you and our partnered cryptocurrency exchanges or any sub-custodian we appoint.
shawki wrote: » Buy what you want but don’t use Revolut.
namloc1980 wrote: » Don't use Revolut for serious investing in crypto. It's not owned by you separately but pooled with other investors. No wallet address. Grand for a little dabble but not anything more.
Dohnjoe wrote: » I've been into crypto since 2013, private wallets are a nightmare to put it mildly. Risks from malware, hacks, technical failure, switching PC's, switching phones, misplaced passwords, having to put **** in physical safes, etc. Then wallets have to be upgraded, tokens need to be migrated, older wallets are a mess (massive blockchain sizes), it's not for the faint-hearted. And fees? I've spent a small fortune on moving coins off exchanges, crypto transfer fees, purchase (and sales) fees on fiat gateway. And then there's the exchange risk, movement risk, ****ing up a trade. The whole thing is risky as **** over the years. Something like Revolut is fine for the average investor.
Jimjay wrote: » I agree, although i do stake some crypto so don't buy that through revolut. I usually check how many coins i get on revolut compared to my kraken account when buying with debit card and while i get more on kraken it isn't a lot more. Transferring via bank can take ages. Today i bought the dip but looks like AIB is now blocking my card from Kraken. Has worked before but today it wouldnt go through to the visa verification and instead i got a message saying my bank has blocked the transaction for security and safety reasons :-(. So i had to use revolut which i had not such problem with. Revolut are also beta testing allowing transfer or crypto so hopefully will be available soon.
antimatterx wrote: » Why are banks allowed to decide how you spend your money.
antimatterx wrote: » Sorry what? Why are banks allowed to decide how you spend your money. Can you do sepa transfer?
pioneerpro wrote: » All the FUD and Wierdos come out with the Heat. It's like a Spike Lee movie. This is where you earn your money in crypto folks. Back up the truck on your convictions over the next 48hrs.
grindle wrote: » Kinda why crypto exists beyond inflation risk. You're giving up your right to your money and loaning your bank money for them to gamble so they can skim the cream. So you can get the benefit of a credit score which they will use against you when they see fit. Economic Stockholm Syndrome. "I trust them"
Donald Trump wrote: » Perhaps the crypto exchanges are used by scammers/thieves? If they get access to your details and transfer the money to another bank account there will be a window where that can possibly be reversed, plus then there is the hope (not always true) that the recipient bank should have done its due diligence on the owner of the recipient account. Money going to an exchange, used to buy tokens which are then moved off the exchange ..... probably no reversing there? One thing people probably know is that when items are purchased using your stolen credit card details, then you won't be at the loss of that. What a lot of people probably don't know is that that loss is absorbed by the merchant, not by the credit card company.
GooglePlus wrote: » Isn't that why 2FA is set up though, I have plenty of security in place that prevents an irregular transaction. Fair enough if it's a one off block from a card that has never been used on an exchange previously but to continuously block a regular purchase, when 2FA is in place, just seems a bit odd.
Donald Trump wrote: » I don't know. I don't use those exchanges. Sim swapping isn't that unheard of in some countries though
HGVRHKYY wrote: » Not an issue in Ireland thankfully
Donald Trump wrote: » But that might be enough to have exchanges listed as potential red flags. The bank doesn't have an exhaustive list of all phone numbers you might possess. And they also don't know that the account it is going to is actually yours!
fritzelly wrote: » Banks can easily identify fraudulent transactions based on your spending history - has existed for years, that Ireland is 10 years behind everyone else is the banks issue and they aren't too fussed about changing it - like instant transfers between SEPA accounts, banking apps that have a fraction of what my N26 app can do. Is it the ESB that don't even have Google pay yet?