the most smartly coded trading bots have the wyckoffian algorithm .
works 70% of the time . worked for me
i dont throw darts at the wall my friend
Good. I use some aspects of Wyckoff in my trading. I'm glad it's working for you.
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the most smartly coded trading bots have the wyckoffian algorithm .
works 70% of the time . worked for me
i dont throw darts at the wall my friend
Good. I use some aspects of Wyckoff in my trading. I'm glad it's working for you.
what are you buying ?
where are you based ?
do you leverage trade on bitmex or spot trade ?
did you buy the dip in dec 2018 ?
https://www.globalresearch.ca/deutsche-bank-next-lehman-brothers/5682841
Duetsche bank collapse has started
bullish for cryptos
commodity trader. nice .
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Lehman bros was too big to fail sir ...
titanic was unsinkable ! i like the hubris of these banks until the point they go bust . ( and get bailed out ) .
literally and figuratively , the banks are the ones in this world with free lunch
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Donald trump rant has shaken the markets and induced panic selling among the weak hands .
the orange fool has nothing better to do in his life,
anyways, a good buying opportunity is emerging
ETH - 160
BCH 250
BTC - 8 k
tgts
Bitcoin has a clear pattern called San Sen. Furthermore, it completed an ABCD move downwards which was equal in length. The market should see some retracement. However, accumulation will only be determined once we see more price action and further change of character. I did a perfect trade going long on gold today, it was textbook.
Crypto-currencies are essential a ponzi scheme that get people to solve math problems in exchange for a bitcoin. The first problem that needed to be solved were something like what is 1+1. And most responded 2, and they all got one bitcoin. There is fake scarcity built into bitcoins and fake rarity. So now the math questions, these questions take many hours of computing energy to get one bitcoin. So those who solve complex math problems, will get the same amount of bit coins as those who at the start of the ponzi scheme were asked what is 1+1. This is built in unfairness. To get the supply low to boost the price for those who answered the question what is 1+1. They got bitcoins for next to nothing. While if you want a bitcoin now, you have to pay 10.000 euros for one bitcoin. Those who were on the ground floor made millions and could potentially make billions, if enough people demand bitcoins now that they are produced in scarcer numbers.
This scam could go on a very long time, decades or bitcoins could replace paper currency. Bitcoin values could top 1 million or more. What is a bitcoin. People on ebay get scammed because some sell bitcoin coins made of copper and people think these are bitcoins, because what they know about bitcoins is they make you money. You get rich off of bitcoins. So long as the ponzi scheme keeps going. Bitcoins are essentially an electric bill people trade. Somebody spends 500 dollars a month on electric bill mining for bitcoins and they sell their electric bill rewards (bitcoins) for one thousand, making 500 per month mining bitcoins.
These bitcoin are not the level of scam that the paper currencies are. FRNs are based on usury and debt. Ponzi schemes are a bit higher holding than usurious money like dollars. FRNs are long term ponzi schemes.
Bitcoins are worthless, having no value, except the expectation of a quick return and others entering the market to boost prices of something that is futures trading on electric bills.
If bitcoins go to zero in value, would you pay 25 dollars for each worthless bitcoin in the market?
Nobody would pay $25 per bitcoin, if bitcoins are worthless.
Now if gold went to zero in price, would you pay 25 dollars for each ounce of gold, even if you knew the price of gold would still be zero. Gold is gold and has value.
Everybody would buy gold at cheap prices, because gold always has value to every sane person. Gold is the possession of kings and the super rich (best jewelry is made of gold). Bitcoin is trying to change that and for that bitcoins are loved by central bankers. The war is not paper money vs bitcoins, Paper money is taking notes on cryptos, they want to replace paper with cryptos. The conflict is between bitcoins and gold. Gold demand fell with cryptos, making a quick buck or a quick million dollars crashed the gold and silver markets. Because this ponzi scheme pays well.
Holding worthless bitcoins that are valued at a million dollars each, still does not change the fact that they are a worthless ponzi scheme.
Paul Krugman
Bitcoin is basically a Ponzi scheme
https://www.seattletimes.com/opinion/bitcoin-is-basically-a-ponzi-scheme/
What was pets.com, a worthless dot-com stock that made no money. bitcoins have millions and billions in debt from electric bills, only the ponzi scheme risk of great rewards gets people to buy this debt electric bill which are called bitcoins.
But pets.com has merchandise to sell, so they had something of value in their company.
Bitcoins can still make you rich, but they are essentially worthless, and be happy that some are buying this worthless money instrument to make you rich. The ride could go on because many want to get rich quick!
Any good website/app to buy cryptocurrency in India after zebpay stopped treading
https://www.investopedia.com/news/what-paul-krugmans-problem-bitcoin/
krugman, a known bitcoin hater
Does not change the fact that bitcoins are a ponzi scheme. The entire monetary system is a ponzi scheme. So bitcoins come along, and don't seem like a scam because they are more valid money than Federal Reserve Notes or other debt fake paper money that gets passed off as real money. Counterfeit money is more real money than fake money that comes from central banks. That is how bad the system is, cryptos are a ponzi scheme and they are better than the rest of the ponzi schemes out there.
The Bitcoin ‘pyramid scheme’ continues to collapse
By John Crudele
November 26, 2018 | 11:39pm | Updated
NY POST
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John Crudele
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The ancient Egyptians made pyramids to last forever. Wall Street’s pyramid schemes aren’t nearly as durable.
Bitcoin, while not officially a product of traditional Wall Street, is a pyramid scheme. A fraud. But it is best described as a “confidence game.”
I’ve been calling it a “bitcon” for a long time. And now the pyramid seems to be collapsing because fewer and fewer people have confidence that the price of this inherently worthless “cryptocurrency” is going to continue to rise.
I’ve just repeated some of the comments I made about bitcoin (and you could include other cryptocurrencies here) for years. But I’ve been especially vocal since early this year, when bitcoin was reaching nearly $20,000 in price and even staid Wall Street firms were being lured to this “investment.”
Here’s what I said about the crypto in a column on Jan. 4 that made predictions for the new year.
“The fact that anyone even has to discuss the fate of this and other so-called cryptocurrencies shows just how crazy the world has become. Bitcoin — or bitcon — is a confidence game. A scam. It will exist and move higher for as long as extremely wealthy people are willing to prop it up in hope that suckers remain confident that bitcoin has some value,” I wrote.
I predicted a number of times that bitcoin would eventually be worth $0.
On the day that column was published, bitcoin was selling for $15,144. That was below the $19,650 peak it reached on Dec. 16, 2017.
Over this past weekend, the price had fallen to just $3,600, which is still $3,600 too much.
Since its peak, bitcoin has lost about $700 billion in value. Think of it this way: The early participants in this pyramid have made a lot of money, but other people have lost $700 billion of their money in less than a year.
What caused that price decline? Nothing. That’s the same reason why bitcoin was once worth $19,650, or $15,144, or any amount.
I discussed this subject with a colleague last week, and she and I agreed that bitcoins are hard to write about. Why? Because bitcoins are the epitome of “thin air” investments. They represent nothing — not a piece of a company, or an ounce of precious metal or the faith in a country.
see also
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Why bitcoin may soon be worth nothing
It’s like writing about philosophy. Bitcoin is a thought. And thoughts have value only if other people value them.
And bitcoin continues to be worth something only if its proponents can convince others to jump on board with the idea and bid up the price.
That’s the definition of a confidence game. You have to be confident that someone is dumb enough to keep investing in this scam.
Bitcoin’s value is certainly disappearing. And the only real explanation is that the confidence game is falling apart. The pyramid scheme that lured new money into this scam is collapsing.
When will bitcoin reach $0? I don’t know, although I did predict in another column that it would before the end of this year.
But I do know this: There are already investigations going on. And once the small investing suckers start complaining, the folks in Washington will get involved.
One report last week said the Trump administration is investigating whether people were propping up the price by purchasing bitcoin with other cyrpotcurrencies, which is like the mathematical equation “Confidence game squared.”
Since I am already on the topic of thieves, let’s talk about Christmas shopping.
We all know that there are people who do their holiday shopping with other people’s money. But how active will crooks be this holiday season?
According to a report from electronic payments expert ACI Worldwide, there will be a 14 percent increase in fraud attempts between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Eve. That’s only slightly below the expected 18 percent increase in the amount of goods purchased this holiday season.
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Crooks are boosting their online fraud game
Fraud attempts like illegal credit card purchases were expected to increase 17 percent between Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday, while purchases during that period were expected to rise 19 percent.
The stores are keeping ahead of the crooks — but just barely.
But give the crooks some credit. Erika Dietrick, global payments director at ACI, says thieves are going for the more expensive goods that are in short supply.
“Fraudsters will keep an eye on items that have limited inventory as it gives them an additional opportunity to steal and sell those items on the dark market for a higher price,” Dietrick says.
Nobody ever said thieves are uneducated in the Law of Supply and Demand.
Old-fashioned shoplifting is also a favorite of thieves. But this is interesting: According to the National Retail Federation, losses from employee theft are now nearly equal to those of shoplifters.
Employees now account for 32.2 percent of what is euphemistically called “inventory shrinkage,” compared with 35.7 percent for shoplifters and other outsiders.
Bitcoins may outlast the FRNs and you could make billions of euros on bitcoins, but this does not mean it is not a wothless ponzi scheme.