No, Bitcoin was $1,000 on January 1, 2017.
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Gold up from $1,100 to $1,280 an oz this year. Gain of 16%
Oil up from $55 to $61 this year. Gain of 11%
Tulip bulbs....Not quoted. No Gain this year.
Bitcoin up from $440 to $11,700 this year. Gain of a big percentage. (2600%?)
No wonder the establishment are calling it a bubble.
They are getting really really worried now.
No, Bitcoin was $1,000 on January 1, 2017.
Bitcoin's the poster child for all cryptos. It nosedives and the rest follows. Later this month on the Comex they will begin trading Bitcoin futures contracts. That's how the PTB suppresses gold and silver prices by exchanging paper derivatives instead of the underlying assets. They control both ends of the wash trade with unlimited fiat through the PPT.
Having looked into Bitcoin further, it has to be bankers creation. The symbolism of Bitcoin being represented as a gold coin is a joke and cannot be a coincidence.
How do you go about selling bitcoin? What if someone says they won't pay the market price? What can you do?
Or are they calling it a bubble because it has all the classic hallmarks of a bubble.
Some of the price inflation is going to be due to increased utility of the currency due to it becoming more prevalent.
However, much of the increase seems to be because people are buying it because the value is going up, which is itself what is driving the value up. That is classic bubble behaviour, is unsustainable, and will only end one way.
Max Keiser (from RT's The Keiser Report) is a huge Bitcoin proponent. He seems to believe the bankers are on the ropes.
https://twitter.com/maxkeiser/status/938092576200151040
Agreed. This is moment the battle begins. A skyrocketing #Bitcoin price means death to banksters and central banksters.
apparently the bitcoin network now consumes more electricity than Denmark, and within 18 months will probably surpass the USA
Yes, it does use up a fair amount of electricity to mine Bitcoin. The processors and cooling fans have to be run almost continually.
The majority of Bitcoin mining takes place here in China. They have warehouse size facilities that are usually located in remote rural areas that take advantage of cheap hydro-electricity.
Bitcoin has, you've guessed it, hit another new high at over $12,500.
Rothschild-owned Economist cover prediction 30 years ago for a new global currency in 2018 and the incredible visual likeness of the Phoenix and Bitcoin is clear.
http://www.ccmb.co.uk/showthread.php...=1#post4814617
Google search result for Bitcoin images: https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=Bi...iw=877&bih=392
You seriously can't spot Phoenix and Bitcoin similarities?
Okay, it's just a coincidence then. I'd say most people would colour it silver as very few have handled any that's gold coloured.
It was prescient of the Economist all those years ago.
I know that. But again people associate with what they are familiar with.
This Bitcoin phenomenon came about because of an anonymous creator or entity who has the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. Whoever's behind it is changing the monetary world at warp speed.
bitcoin is a bubble, like all before it. when the price of a commodity is driven up be the demand for the commodity rather than the intrinsic value of the commodity itself, then we have a bubble waiting to burst. Bitcoin is not underpinned by anything in the way fiat currency is, its value has been derived by its finite supply and its perceived demand.
this reminds me of VW and Porsche from a few years ago, when the hedge funds were taken to the cleaners.
Bitcoin now north of $13,000 and £10,000. Up 13% on the day.