This market is so weak, it's like a sword hanging by a thread. When it inevitably breaks, it will be fatal.
There are more liquidations till $63K Bitcoin than there were from $60K -> $70K.
Maybe it is but it doesn't look like a top just yet. It's just a game where they are trying to squeeze the shorters and sucker in more retail and ETF funds before the rug gets pulled.
Don't fool yourself. It's a ponzi pump&dump scheme, there is no underlying value. If you are right on timing (and many who bought early have been) you can make a lot of money.
But it's at the expanse of those who come in later and then everyone loses.
Shorters are some of the most kind and genuine people on earth. They try to expose the frauds before they can hurt more people. It is unfortunate that the fraudsters usually have more capital and can easily squeeze the shorters, creating an even larger bubble. But that's how it is.
A nice and honest review of the bitcoin mining business by Sahm Adrangi. He seems like such a nice and honest guy, wish there were more people like this!
What really gets me about this is that a really intelligent person needs to think a few steps ahead to really determine if this is in fact true or not.Has to be one of the stupidest statement made in the past 15 years:-
“Bitcoin mining is one of the stupidest business models we’ve come across in our time short selling over the past 15 years.”
Does this map that shows three countries doing 72.17% of all bitcoin mining look decentralized?The reason why bitcoin cannot be "hacked" or corrupted, is exactly because of the mining.
...
To be fully decentralized means that its impossible for any company or country to change the functioning of bitcoin.

Number of countries is meaningless. Companies, not countries are doing the mining.Does this map that shows three countries doing 72.17% of all bitcoin mining look decentralized?
View attachment 341674
You have a point there -- big governments never do anything bad because they always follow the will of the people.Number of countries is meaningless. Companies, not countries are doing the mining.
Anyway I see 11-12 circles over that map covering the U.S. And those are prolly just the biggies.
Notice importantly none in Iran or North Korea.

I agree that it would be nice if there was more in other countries, but I don't worry that anyone has enough mining power to launch any kind of attack.Does this map that shows three countries doing 72.17% of all bitcoin mining look decentralized?
View attachment 341674