“Our plan is to liquidate our holdings daily and turn them into US dollars,” Yagan said. “There's an open question as to how much liquidity there is. I think there's going to be a tremendous amount of volatility. One of the reasons why we want to be early in the mix is so we can learn.”
I'm thinking of doing some exchange arbitrage.
https://www.bitstamp.net/ <--- as of right now, this one is selling for $65
https://bitbargain.co.uk/buy <--- as of right now, the cheapest on the marketplace is around £75. Thats GBP. Seems like a no brainer?!?!
EDIT: Actually I should look at the ask price on the site I plan on selling on, which is £50 ($75). So I'd make $10 per BTC. Not sure if that's worth the risk of catastrophic meltdown between the time I buy a BTC and the time I sell![]()
Which got me thinking. If more and more real-world companies, with real products and real bills to pay, do start accepting BitCoins, won't this actually make the currency less valuable, because they will be dumping all those BitCoins on the exchange in order to get hold of some $$$ to pay their bills and salaries? Of course, more people accepting BTC means more people buying BTC with USD, so it might even out over time. However, if you buy BitCoins now, with the expectation that you will be able to buy valuable things in the future, you will probably end up paying over the odds for your stuff in $ terms.
It's almost time for Mr. Andresen to get back to work. He shares some useful advice about Bitcoin: "I tell people it's still an experiment and only invest time or money you could afford to lose." If only investors could as easily follow that advice with fiat currencies.
As of right now, one Bitcoin is $113 if you are trying to keep track.
A computer hard drive holding a Bitcoin virtual fortune of £4m has been buried under tons of rubbish after its owner accidentally threw it away.
The hard drive, languishing on a landfill site, has on it a digital wallet containing 7,500 Bitcoins – an online virtual currency.
The Bitcoins were worth almost nothing when they were created – but the cryptocurrency’s value has since soared.
James Howells bought and stored them on his laptop in 2009. However, a year later he spilled lemonade on the computer, which he then dismantled to salvage some of the parts.
He placed the hard drive in a drawer and completely forgot about it until he had a clear-out this summer.
It was with horror he realised last week that the cryptographic ‘private key’ needed to access and spend the Bitcoins was on the lost hard drive.
Isn't it above $1000 now? What is driving the price so high? And could you actually cash them out if you wanted to?
Isn't it above $1000 now? What is driving the price so high? And could you actually cash them out if you wanted to?