Although I agree with the content of your message, calling someone a "pig-shit retard" is over the top, so please dial down the name-calling and aggressive profanity. Thanks!
I am sorry, Baron. It will not happen again
Although I agree with the content of your message, calling someone a "pig-shit retard" is over the top, so please dial down the name-calling and aggressive profanity. Thanks!
I am sorry, Baron. It will not happen again
View attachment 342968
Actually, deaddog used "guarantee... get your money back" and risk-free to describe the US treasuries and used volatility to compare the risk vs Bitcoin which I disproved all points albeit in a colorful way
It is not hindsight when deaddog claims the US treasuries are risk-free and "guarantee to get your money back" today, when we have evidence to the contrary
Tell me, How much would $100k invested in the US 10yr treasury in 2020 be worth today if needs to be sold?
An asset that boasts the most liquidity and market depth, or are you going to argue that it's not a loss until it has been taken, something that is always used against Bitcoin
The yield started at 50 basis points in 2020 and now there's almost half the time has passed on those 10yr treasuries
On the subject of volatility, do you think the price of those 10yr treasuries purchased in 2020 will go back to its price? i.e. the FFR would have to go to negative for that to happen
Those 10yr treasuries had extreme volatility to the downside but has no chance to go up as government bonds do not trade in that manner
On the same subject of risk wrt Bitcoin volatility, there is a sharpe-ratio that shows Bitcoin volatility is not that risky as you get paid with the returns very high CAGR
No, it is not hindsight, but now I wasted my time as always having to educate deaddog and apparently you are also uneducated
Your bias blinds you from the evidence. Fact check everything I said on here and refute them

The point is that a bond guarantees the principal to be returned, along with accrued interest, if held to maturity. Sometimes the safe thing may not be the best thing, but it is this assurance that the typical bond investor is probably seeking. He may have other tranches of his portfolio in more volatile assets, but clearly the bond component serves a purpose because it is there. I doubt that when those bonds mature that the proceeds will be placed into haywire cryptos. Perhaps those same investors already have some exposure to crypto in other components of their portfolio, but I don't think that matured bonds will be replaced with crypto. To think so is wishful thinking by dyed-in-the-wool crypto bros such as yourself.View attachment 342968
Actually, deaddog used "guarantee... get your money back" and risk-free to describe the US treasuries and used volatility to compare the risk vs Bitcoin which I disproved all points albeit in a colorful way
It is not hindsight when deaddog claims the US treasuries are risk-free and "guarantee to get your money back" today, when we have evidence to the contrary
Tell me, How much would $100k invested in the US 10yr treasury in 2020 be worth today if needs to be sold?
An asset that boasts the most liquidity and market depth, or are you going to argue that it's not a loss until it has been taken, something that is always used for Bitcoin
The yield started at 50 basis points in 2020 and now there's almost half the time has passed on those 10yr treasuries
On the subject of volatility, do you think the price of those 10yr treasuries purchased in 2020 will go back to its price? i.e. the FFR would have to go to negative for that to happen
Those 10yr treasuries had extreme volatility to the downside but has no chance to go up as government bonds do not trade in that manner
On the same subject of risk wrt Bitcoin volatility, there is a sharpe-ratio that shows Bitcoin volatility is not that risky as you get paid with the returns very high CAGR
No, it is not hindsight, but now I wasted my time as always having to educate deaddog and apparently you are also uneducated
Your bias blinds you from the evidence. Fact check everything I said on here and refute them
For a proud owner of a (2008) Lambo, you sure act like a teenager yet to get his driver's permit.Can we not clutter the Bitcoin price thread with bickering taking focus away from the reality that I just posted probably the greatest price projection of all time...especially considering at the time most were calling for 100k...and I was saying 50ks before 100ks?
(See my lost post)
The point is that a bond guarantees the principal to be returned, along with accrued interest, if held to maturity. Sometimes the safe thing may not be the best thing, but it is this assurance that the typical bond investor is probably seeking. He may have other tranches of his portfolio in more volatile assets, but clearly the bond component serves a purpose because it is there. I doubt that when those bonds mature that the proceeds will be placed into haywire cryptos. Perhaps those same investors already have some exposure to crypto in other components of their portfolio, but I don't think that matured bonds will be replaced with crypto. To think so is wishful thinking by dyed-in-the-wool crypto bros such as yourself.
Hindsight Harold has spoken!I will tell you now, that kind of loss is not a definition of risk-free
Hindsight Harold has spoken!
For a proud owner of a (2008) Lambo, you sure act like a teenager yet to get his driver's permit.

lol, ok you lost the argument and now name-calling,
No, it is not hindsight, I was not the one that described US treasuries as risk-free TODAY
but the DATA THAT WE HAVE SAYS THEY ARE VERY RISKY
Call me another name again, but the DATA does not change

We are not even arguing about the same thing.lol, ok you lost the argument and now name-calling,
No, it is not hindsight, I was not the one that described US treasuries as risk-free TODAY
but the DATA THAT WE HAVE SAYS THEY ARE VERY RISKY
Call me another name again, but the DATA does not change
Apparently, so is thinking.English is my second language
We are not even arguing about the same thing.
Apparently, so is thinking.
Go buy more crypto.