Poll: When will bitcoin hit $1000???

Discussion in 'Crypto Assets' started by JeffGoldman, Dec 27, 2016.

When will bitcoin hit $1000 USD

  1. In 2016 (4 days away)

    5 vote(s)
    21.7%
  2. By Feb 2017

    5 vote(s)
    21.7%
  3. By July 2017

    2 vote(s)
    8.7%
  4. Second half of 2017

    3 vote(s)
    13.0%
  5. Who cares? As long as it goes up!

    2 vote(s)
    8.7%
  6. Never!

    6 vote(s)
    26.1%
  1. This is more for fun....but what's everyone's prediction for bitcoin hitting $1000?
     
  2. Stymie

    Stymie

    The more interesting question for me, where is the cost of producing a bit coin today and how will the exponential curve going forward in terms of cost impact the price of bitcoins? Can we expect the price of bitcoin to reach $2000 in the foreseeable future. This would not be simply a demand outcome but related to the cost of producing one more bitcoin as we approach the maximum number. Should we expect that number to happen sooner given the exponential costs for each new coin if it is in fact getting more expensive to produce each new coin.
     
  3. Remember the last time it hit $1000 ?
     
  4. Overnight

    Overnight

    Aren't Bitcoins a self-imploding system? There's a fixed number of them that can ever be created, yet their value is based on nothing. Just virtual nothing, aside from the value people place upon them. They cannot be used to produce anything tangible, they cannot be physically traded between merchants and purchasers.

    Oil is also a fixed-number commodity, meaning there is only so much of it out there, but it can be used to produce something tangible (energy, plastic etc.). There may be a point where oil is worth more than gold in it's weight. But what about BitC? It weighs nothing (since it does not exist physically) and represents only the virtual value people ascribe to it.

    Will BitCoins ever be worth their non-existent weight in gold?
     
  5. Stymie

    Stymie

    Bitcoins are traded via the blockchain which is not hackable. This provides the most secure method of transaction between merchants and customers. It's also anonymous so people can't find you including your X. Once all coins have been produced, the supply will stay static and the upside is limited only by demand. I would Guess the price collapses if a better technology is created to offer a more secure platform to transact.

    The value rests with its ability to facilitate financial transactions globally in an anonymous and secure environment at the lowest cost. The volatility suggests that investors also see this as an alternative to US dollars which can be printed in unlimited amounts.
     
  6. that's right, bitcoin is basically like paper money except paper money is backed by the government....what's bitcoin backed by? nothing
     
  7. Paper money is backed by confidence not government (unless they use fixed exchange rate). Bitcoin,a toy?? If it's not a currency, not an investment asset, neither a commodity, so what is that? A christmas toy? Pls don't tell me it's gold.
     
  8. toonerdy

    toonerdy

    I think that Bitcoin and some similar e-currencies have value because some participants are willing to pay for privacy.

    Those privacy seeking participants have less ability to exchange Bitcoin for conventional currencies (due to identification requirements or perhaps other local laws), so they have to hold Bitcoin that they've earned until they come across something to spend it on. These privacy seeking participants are willing to buy a product or service at a premium and sell a (different) product or service at a discount, if they can do both of these things using bitcoin.

    So, in the absense of any speculative hoarding, shorting or other trades, the equilibrium should be (inspired by Milton Friedman's "MV = PQ" monetarism formula, if I haven't botched it):

    value of all bitcoins = number of privacy seekers * value held by average privacy seeker

    value of one bitcoin * total number of bitcoins = number of privacy seekers * value held by average privacy seeker

    value of one bitcoin = (number of privacy seekers * value held by average privacy seeker) / total number of bitcoins

    In this model, if the number of privacy seekers increases faster than the total number of bitcoins, the value of a bitcoin should rise.

    For example, imagine a web site designer using a fake name in a foreign country willing to work for less money if paid in Bitcoin and willing pay extra to a lawyer to help him with an asylum application if the lawyer will accept payment in Bitcoin. The web site owner and the lawyer don't mind identifying themselves, so they are able to exchange their local currency to and from Bitcoin. The anonymous programmer seeking asylum needs to accumulate Bitcoin for a while and then spend it to pay the lawyer. If there are enough of these asylum seeking programmers, they're going to take a lot of Bitcoin out of circulation temporarily, while they save up to pay their lawyers.

    Imagine that this were the only use for Bitcoin and that there were many such asylum seeking programmers, and that they, on average, were, at any given moment, half way to saving up the amount need to pay for the asylum application. If that were so, then we the equilibrium would be:

    value of one bitcoin = (# of asylum seeking programmers * cost of lawyer / 2) / # of bitcoins existing

    So, why would the value of Bitcoin move toward this equilibrium? Well, if Bitcoin exchanges were offering only exchange rates valuing Bitcoin above this amount, asylum seeking programmers be able to offer less to the lawyers to make it worth their while, so they would end up holding less Bitcoin, leaving a glut of additional Bitcoin at the exchanges that nobody had any use for, so the exchanges would be inclined to compete with each other to get what dollars they could for them, driving the value of bitcoin down until it was absorbed by programmers needing to hold more of it to pay more Bitcoin for asylum services.

    If Bitcoin exchanges were offering only exchange rates below this amount, programmers would have to offer their lawyers more Bitcoin to make it worth their while, which would means they would end up holding more Bitcoin while they saved to pay their lawyers, taking more bitcoin out of circulation, but would be able to charge more Bitcoin for their programming work, so Bitcoin exchanges would experience increased demand for Bitcoin from web site owners to pay these programmers, driving the value of Bitcoin up.

    So, basically, some of the people who really have a use for Bitcoin also need to hold it for a while. So, the value of all of the Bitcoin in the world must be at least the value that these people are trying to hold with it.
     
  9. I just wonder whether bitcoin could survive when crisis like financial crisis 2008 happens...remember people tend to withdraw money from their investment during crisis. Only then you can find out about it better like madoff treasury bill
     
  10. The question is when bitcoin hit $600 again?!
     
    #10     Dec 28, 2016