If you're going to buy in, let the rest of us know first so we can get out before you drag the market down.Keep telling myself it's too late to buy back in, then I check an hour later and it's up another $5.
If you're going to buy in, let the rest of us know first so we can get out before you drag the market down.
Forgot to mention it. I got out at $92 at around 11am... so naturally its jumped up to $103
Litecoin? It is up another ~30% to $135 a month later.
Bitcoin has been climbing since it got down to around $3100 7 months ago and is currently around $9200. Love it as a long-term speculative investment, but it's no fun for those who bought over $10K and are still cursing. I find it amusing to look in on the cryptos as I do technical analysis of other investments.
You can ask that question about most investments. Rocks, metals, and companies only have value if another person will pay you for your "piece".How does one invest in something that is nothing?
How does one invest in something that is nothing?
When huge amounts of wealth are dumped into block chain currencies and cause their costs to rapidly rise upwards it is because people with great wealth are jumping into block chains. Figuring out why is the fun part.
Banking the unbanked, challenging fiat, store of value?
jumpimg in the boat because so many others are doing it
[FONT=&]I am not a fan of Bitcoin and other Cryptocurrencies, which are not money, and whose value is highly volatile and based on thin air. Unregulated Crypto Assets can facilitate unlawful behavior, including drug trade and other illegal activity....[/FONT]
https://www.forbes.com/sites/rachel...ne-from-ship-owned-by-jp-morgan/#59dfc5872ea3In one of the largest drug busts in U.S. history, federal authorities in Philadelphia seized nearly 20 tons of cocaine—worth about $1 billion— last month from a ship owned by JP Morgan's asset management arm.
The president Via Twitter:
Fiat Banksters? "There's nothing to see here, move along, don't look below":
https://www.forbes.com/sites/rachel...ne-from-ship-owned-by-jp-morgan/#59dfc5872ea3
The ship, named MSC Gayane, is operated by Switzerland-based Mediterranean Shipping Company, but it was financed by a transportation strategy fund run by JP Morgan's asset management arm. The ship is leased out to MSC
That is such a stretch, even for you
From your cite
It was financed by a division of JPM during shipbuilding as a speculative venture, and once completed it was leased to a Swiss operating company. If a leased Delta liveried aircraft carries a passenger into Miami that is smuggling cocaine, does that somehow mean that Delta, the leasing company or Boeing are somehow involved in the illegal enterprise?