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52325176 No.52325176 [Reply] [Original]

Give it to me straight. Is it over?

>> No.52325211

>>52325176
The ride never ends

>> No.52325216

>>52325176
Nobody knows yet. This might be the last dump unironically for a while or maybe until the next bullrun. But is this dump specifically over? Not sure.

>> No.52325231

>>52325176
This is just the beginning

>> No.52325244

>>52325176
Depends on how much forced selling FTX will have to do. I don't know how big their holdings were though

>> No.52325293

>>52325176
do you have a clean copy of that card? I want to print some off

>> No.52325504
File: 9 KB, 240x240, Matt Levine.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52325504

So how could this happen? I don’t know, but let me speculate a little bit.

Let’s start with Coinbase. Coinbase Global Inc. runs a cryptocurrency exchange. When FTX.com, one of the largest crypto exchanges, was instantaneously vaporized yesterday, Coinbase put out a statement, the gist of which was “don’t worry, we are not going to be instantaneously vaporized.” The part that I want to focus on is this paragraph:

>There can’t be a “run on the bank” at Coinbase. As you can review in our publicly filed, audited financial statements, we hold customer assets 1:1. Any institutional lending activity at Coinbase is at the discretion of the customer and backed by collateral. We have no gating for client loan recalls or withdrawals.

>> No.52325535

>>52325504
The way it works is roughly that you open an account and send dollars to Coinbase, and then you tell Coinbase “I’d like to buy some Bitcoin with those dollars,” and Coinbase buys Bitcoin and holds on to it for you and charges you a fee for that transaction. You can check your account balance, and Coinbase says “you have 0.5 Bitcoin” or whatever. That 0.5 Bitcoin is, in the general case, held by Coinbase; it has possession of the Bitcoin. [1] But it is held in a custody account for you. Coinbase says:

>Your funds are your funds, and your crypto is your crypto: Coinbase maintains internal systems, like a bank or a broker. Our fully audited ledger identifies your account, your fiat and crypto holdings, and tracks your account activity in real time. There’s never a situation where customer funds could be confused with corporate assets.

>We will never repurpose your funds: We do not lend or take any action with your assets, unless you specifically instruct us to. Many banks and financial institutions use customer funds for commercial purposes including lending and trading, meaning that they often hold only a fraction of their customer assets at any given time. Coinbase always holds customer assets 1:1. This means that funds are available to our customers 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days of the year.

>> No.52325564
File: 498 KB, 500x281, FUCK THIS.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52325564

>>52325176
Extremely over.

>> No.52325569

>>52325535
The analogy is: Imagine a weird sort of bank. You come to the bank with $100 in paper bills, and you deposit it in the bank, and the bank takes your paper bills and sticks them in an envelope with your name on it. Then it sticks the envelope in a vault, and if at any point you ask for your money back, it opens the vault and hands you your envelope. This sounds like a bad business model: The bank needs to pay for real estate and tellers and vaults, and it is not doing anything with your money. But the other weird thing about this bank is that, every day, you come in and say “hey I’d like to exchange my dollars for euros” or “my euros for pounds” or whatever, and each time you do that the bank charges you a dollar. So you have $100, which you exchange for €99, which you exchange for £98, which you exchange for $97, etc., [2] paying the bank $1 each time. If all of the bank’s customers do this every day, then the bank makes plenty of money to pay for real estate and tellers and vaults and executive bonuses, without doing anything else with your money. It just takes the $100 out of your envelope and replaces it with €99, etc., always keeping exactly the right amount of money (in whatever currency you like that day) in exactly your envelope. [3]

>> No.52325587

>>52325176
no anon, its only just beginning........

>> No.52325598

>>52325569
And then if one day every single customer walked into the bank at the same time and said “we would like our money back,” the bank would just hand them all their envelopes. Don’t get me wrong, this would be a catastrophe for the bank: If everyone took their envelopes back, then presumably they would stop changing money at the bank and paying fees, and the bank would stop making money, and it would no longer be able to pay for real estate or tellers or vaults or executive bonuses. It would go out of business in fairly short order. But it would not go out of business that minute. It would actually have enough money to give all the customers their money back, because it kept all the customers’ money in their own envelopes the whole time.

>> No.52325630

>>52325598
No actual bank works that way. Real banks take deposits but don’t keep the money in envelopes; they lend it out. [4] Most classically, they borrow short to lend long, taking checking deposits that can be withdrawn at any time, and using them to make long-term mortgages. This makes them vulnerable to runs, Diamond-Dybvig, It’s a Wonderful Life, etc., everyone knows all this.

But in theory a cryptocurrency exchange could work that way, and at a high level of generality Coinbase sort of does. [5] Historically — not so much now, but until early this year anyway — cryptocurrencies were volatile and exciting and people were jazzed to trade them a lot, so you could make a lot of money by just charging fees without doing anything else with customer assets. And that is a run-proof business. If everyone takes their money out at once, you have the money.

But then one day a customer comes to you and says “I have $10,000, but I am really bullish on Bitcoin, so I would like to buy $20,000 worth of Bitcoin. Why don’t you lend me $10,000 so I can buy $20,000 of Bitcoin, so I can get more excitement?” This is called a margin loan.

>> No.52325638

>>52325176
crypto kinda got set back by like 5 years, so ye

>> No.52325674

>>52325630
Or — equivalently — a customer comes to you and says “I have $20,000 of Bitcoin in my account, and I need some cash this month. I don’t want to sell my Bitcoin, because I am a true believer and also do not want to realize gains for tax purposes. Could you just lend me $10,000, secured by my $20,000 of Bitcoin? You know I’m good for it: If I don’t pay you back, you can sell my Bitcoin and pay yourself back from the proceeds.”

You might just say “no, that’s dumb, Bitcoin is volatile, buying $10,000 of Bitcoin is plenty of excitement.” (In fact Coinbase shut down margin trading in 2020.) But your competitors probably offer loans, and it is tempting for you to do it too. So you say, sure, fine, I’ll take your $10,000 and put $20,000 of Bitcoin in your account.

But where do you get the money that you are lending to the customer? Well, you have to borrow it too. Ordinarily the way that you will borrow it is by putting up the customer’s Bitcoin as collateral to your lender, just as the customer puts up its Bitcoin as collateral to you. If the customer defaults, you still have to pay your lender (and then you get the Bitcoin back and can sell it to pay off your customer’s liability to you); if you default, the lender sells the Bitcoin.

>> No.52325701

Computer Magik Money
house built on sand = washed away

>> No.52325702

>>52325674
But who are the lenders? Oh, various possibilities. But one general point is that while some customers will want to borrow dollars to buy Bitcoin, other customers will want to borrow Bitcoin. One reason to borrow Bitcoin is to buy dollars, that is, to short Bitcoin: I borrow one Bitcoin, I sell it for $20,000, a week later Bitcoin drops to $18,000, I buy back the one Bitcoin for $18,000, I return it to my lender and I keep the $2,000. There are variations on this trade (I borrow Bitcoin and sell it for Ethereum, betting on the relative value between the tokens, etc.). It is necessarily a leveraged trade; I can’t short Bitcoin without borrowing it. [6]

If you are a crypto exchange, this is a nice opportunity. You have Customer A who has Bitcoin and wants to borrow dollars, and Customer B who has dollars and wants to borrow Bitcoin. (By “dollars,” for a crypto exchange, I mostly mean “dollar-denominated stablecoins,” though potentially also dollars.) You take some of Customer A’s Bitcoin and lend it to Customer B, and you take some of Customer B’s dollars and lend them to Customer A. Each of them is overcollateralized — you only lend Customer A half the value of her Bitcoin, and you only lend Customer B half the value of his dollars — so you feel pretty safe. And they both pay you interest.

But there are risks. One day Customer A might come in, pay off her dollar loan, and ask to take her Bitcoin back. You don’t have her Bitcoin, or not all of them anyway; some of them are with Customer B. Customer B owes them to you — ultimately you’re good for it — but you don’t have them now. There is a timing problem.

>> No.52325710

every normie i talk to is out of crypto

>> No.52325735

>>52325702
The solution to this is pretty much to have some extra cash — some of your own capital — to bridge these timing problems. Eventually you’ll get the rest of the Bitcoin back from Customer B, but for now you just pay Customer A out of your own Bitcoin stash.

But the timing problem is also connected to a real economic risk. If the price of Bitcoin falls by 90%, Customer B will be thrilled. He will come to you and say “here’s my Bitcoin back, I’d like to withdraw my dollars.” But you don’t have his dollars, or not all of them; half of them are with Customer A. Your dollar loan to Customer A is now underwater: You loaned her 50% of the value of her Bitcoin, but Bitcoin fell by 90%, so she owes you more than her collateral is worth. You call her up and ask her for more money — a “margin call” — but she, sensibly, doesn’t answer the phone. [7] You have to pay Customer B out of your own capital, and you don’t get it back from Customer A. You've just lost money. Actually that’s the best outcome. The worst outcome is that you don’t have enough capital, you go bankrupt, and Customer B does not get his money back.

Everyone knows this, which is why crypto exchanges — and securities broker-dealers, who have the same basic business model — spend most of their time thinking about risk management. Before the price of Bitcoin drops too far, you will be calling up Customer A for more margin, and if she doesn’t answer the phone you will liquidate her position to pay back the loan you made. If you are a sophisticated modern crypto exchange like FTX, you will have automated 24/7 margining systems that automatically liquidate trades that have gotten too risky, so that only the rarest catastrophic market moves could get you in trouble.

>> No.52325762

>>52325735
But sometimes market moves are catastrophic, and in particular, sometimes securities broker-dealers and crypto exchanges will have “run on the bank” risks. If everyone knows that you are in this situation — that you have a lot of Bitcoin collateral and Bitcoin prices are falling — people will expect you to have to liquidate your Bitcoin collateral, so they will expect Bitcoin prices to fall, so they will sell Bitcoin, which will cause Bitcoin prices to fall, which will cause your long-Bitcoin customers to default, which will cause you to liquidate Bitcoin at lower and lower prices, etc., until you are bankrupt.

Now let’s add one more crypto element. If you are a crypto exchange, you might issue your own crypto token. FTX issues a token called FTT. The attributes of this token are, like, it entitles you to some discounts and stuff, but the main attribute is that FTX periodically uses a portion of its profits to buy back FTT tokens. This makes FTT kind of like stock in FTX: The higher FTX’s profits are, the higher the price of FTT will be. [8] It is not actually stock in FTX — in fact FTX is a company and has stock and venture capitalists bought it, etc. — but it is a lot like stock in FTX. FTT is a bet on FTX’s future profits.

But it is also a crypto token, which means that a customer can come to you and post $100 worth of FTT as collateral and borrow $50 worth of Bitcoin, or dollars, or whatever, against that collateral, just as they would with any other token. Or something; you might set the margin requirements higher or lower, letting customers borrow 25% or 50% or 95% of the value of their FTT token collateral.

>> No.52325766

>>52325710
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/w/wisdom-crowds.asp#:~:text=Wisdom%20of%20the%20crowd%20is,and%20innovating%20than%20an%20individual.

>> No.52325787

>>52325762
If you think of the token as “more or less stock,” and you think of a crypto exchange as a securities broker-dealer, this is completely insane. If you go to an investment bank and say “lend me $1 billion, and I will post $2 billion of your stock as collateral,” you are messing with very dark magic and they will say no. [9] The problem with this is that it is wrong-way risk. (It is also, at least sometimes, illegal.) If people start to worry about the investment bank’s financial health, its stock will go down, which means that its collateral will be less valuable, which means that its financial health will get worse, which means that its stock will go down, etc. It is a death spiral. In general it should not be possible to bankrupt an investment bank by shorting its stock. If one of the bank’s main assets is its own stock — is a leveraged bet on its own stock — then it is easy to bankrupt it by shorting its stock.

>> No.52325869

>>52325787
The worst case is something like:

1. You have 100 Customer As who are long Bitcoin on margin: They each have 1 Bitcoin in their accounts and owe you $10,000.

2. You have 100 Customer Bs who are short Bitcoin on margin: They each have $20,000 in their account and owe you 0.5 Bitcoin.

3.You have loaned 50 of the Customer As’ Bitcoins to the Customer Bs, and $1 million of the Customer Bs’ dollars to the Customer As. You keep the other 50 Bitcoins and $1 million as collateral.

4. Your accounts show that you owe clients 100 Bitcoins and $2 million, and that they owe you back 50 Bitcoins and $1 million, and you have 50 Bitcoins and $1 million on hand, so everything balances.

5. You have one Customer C who says “hi I would like to borrow 50 Bitcoins and $1 million, I will secure that loan with 150,000 FTT, each of which is worth $20.”

6. You say “sure, sounds good,” and hand over all your collateral.

7. Now you have 150,000 of FTT, worth $3 million, as collateral (and no Bitcoins or dollars).

8. Your accounts show that you owe clients 100 Bitcoins and $2 million and 150,000 FTT, and they owe you back 100 Bitcoins and $2 million, and you have 150,000 FTT of collateral, so everything balances.

>> No.52325894

>>52325869
But then if the value of FTT drops to zero, you have nothing. You have no Bitcoins to give to the customers to whom you owe Bitcoins, no dollars to give to the customers to whom you owe dollars. You just have to call up Customer C and say “hey we need all those dollars and Bitcoins back.” But Customer C will not want to give you back all those valuable dollars and Bitcoins in exchange for now-worthless FTT. Also the fact that Customer C had all that FTT in the first place is not a great sign. It is an FTT whale, and FTT is now worthless. Has it been borrowing elsewhere against FTT? Are all those debts coming due?

Now let’s add a few more FTX-specific elements. One is that FTX is an exchange for levered traders, offering products like perpetual futures and leveraged tokens that build in margin lending. So whereas the basic model of Coinbase is “they buy Bitcoin for you and put it in an envelope,” the basic model of FTX has to be “they lend you money to buy crypto and then make use of your crypto to get the money.” In financial terms, they have to rehypothecate your collateral; you can’t expect them to just keep it in an envelope if they’re lending you the money to buy it.

>> No.52325935

>>52325894
The other is that FTX is closely associated with a hedge fund called Alameda Research. Sam Bankman-Fried founded Alameda to do crypto arbitrage and market-making trades, and then he founded FTX to basically have a better exchange for Alameda to trade on. Alameda has lots of FTT, and last week Coindesk reported on its balance sheet; the gist of that report was “wow its balance sheet is mostly FTT”:

>The financials make concrete what industry-watchers already suspect: Alameda is big. As of June 30, the company’s assets amounted to $14.6 billion. Its single biggest asset: $3.66 billion of “unlocked FTT.” The third-largest entry on the assets side of the accounting ledger? A $2.16 billion pile of “FTT collateral.”

>There are more FTX tokens among its $8 billion of liabilities: $292 million of “locked FTT.” (The liabilities are dominated by $7.4 billion of loans.)

That is not in itself a reason for a run on FTX! It might be a reason for the price of FTT to go down, if you think that Alameda has too much of it and might need to sell it.

>> No.52325965

>>52325935
The reason for a run on FTX is that you think that Alameda is, in my terminology, Customer C. The reason for a run on FTX is if you think that FTX loaned Alameda a bunch of customer assets and got back FTT in exchange. If that’s the case, then a crash in the price of FTT will destabilize FTX. If you’re worried about that, you should take your money out of FTX before the crash. If everyone is worried about that, they will all take their money out of FTX. But FTX doesn’t have their money; it has FTT, and a loan to Alameda. If they all take their money out, that’s a bank run.

And all of this is self-fulfilling: If you are worried about FTX’s business, then the price of FTT should go down. If the price of FTT goes down, then FTX’s business is riskier, because it has less collateral. If, say, the operator of the biggest crypto exchange gently raises one eyebrow and says “FTT, eh?” that can be enough to topple FTX. FTT goes down, leaving FTX undercapitalized, leading to customer withdrawals, leading to ruin.

>> No.52325999

>>52325965
Anyway it is still early and confusing but that seems to be the story of FTX. Coindesk reported on Alameda’s FTT exposure, and then Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, the founder of Binance Holdings Ltd., the largest crypto exchange, raised eyebrows by tweeting that Binance would sell its FTT holdings “due to recent revelations.” People worried that this would tank the price of FTT and put pressure on FTX, so they started withdrawing money from FTX. FTX didn’t have the money, and Bankman-Fried started calling around asking for a loan or a bailout. Eventually he called CZ himself, and they announced a non-binding letter of intent for Binance to acquire FTX and make customers whole. Bankman-Fried’s fortune basically vanished, as did his “ emperor aura.” Venture capital investors in FTX — which last raised money at a $32 billion valuation — are probably getting zeroed, the price of FTT collapsed, and now regulators are investigating.

>> No.52326032

>>52325999
n this description I have drawn on Twitter threads from Jon Wu, Lucas Nuzzi and an anonymous “Wassie Lawyer,” who make arguments along these lines, as well as this Substack post from Byrne Hobart. But the most informed view is probably that of CZ himself, who tweeted this morning:

Two big lessons:

1: Never use a token you created as collateral.

2: Don’t borrow if you run a crypto business. Don't use capital "efficiently". Have a large reserve.

Binance has never used BNB for collateral, and we have never taken on debt.

“Never use a token you created as collateral” suggests, to me, that FTX accepted its FTT token as collateral, probably from Alameda, probably in exchange for borrowing assets that it owes to customers. And that that went wrong in roughly the way I have outlined.

>> No.52326080

>>52326032
One other point here is that if this is the story, then it is not a liquidity crisis but a solvency one. That is, the problem is not a timing mismatch, in which FTX’s customers asked for their cash back but FTX did not have enough ready cash because it had long-term but money-good loans out. The problem is that FTX took its customers’ money and traded it for a pile of magic beans, and now the beans are worthless and there’s a huge hole in the balance sheet. On that note:

>Changpeng Zhao moved fast when Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX.com was on the brink, offering to take it over and stem any further crypto contagion.

>Within hours, he was forced to reconsider.

>For starters, Binance executives quickly found themselves staring into a financial black hole -- a gap between liabilities and assets at FTX that’s probably in the billions, and possibly more than $6 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter.

>> No.52326113

>>52326080
>On top of that, US regulators are circling FTX, investigating whether the firm properly handled customer funds, as well as its relationship with other parts of Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire, Bloomberg News reported Wednesday.

>It makes for a tricky decision for Zhao, known in the crypto world as CZ: Follow through with rescuing his onetime top rival and shoulder the financial and regulatory burdens, or let FTX crumble and sort through the potential wreckage? Zhao himself admits there was no “master plan” to take over FTX.

>His answer, at least for now, is that the financial hole appears too deep. Binance is unlikely to follow through on its takeover of FTX, according to the person familiar, who wasn’t authorized to publicly discuss the matter.

Seems bad.

>> No.52326197

>>52326113
Are these yours? It’s a great explanation.

>> No.52326259

>>52326197
No, it's Money Stuff at Newsletterhunt.com
Matt Levine does a daily newsletter on Crypto, Finance, Corporate and Market stuff, Elon Musk, you should check it out.

>> No.52326430

>>52326259
Cool thanks.

>> No.52326591
File: 266 KB, 750x500, 1655511761144.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52326591

>>52325176
>. Is it over?
For crypto yes, it is. And that's a good thing.

>> No.52326615

>>52326259
Thanks for posting all this. I'd deposit a BAT in your Brave Wallet.

>> No.52326910

Bampu

>> No.52326968

>>52326113
[1] Coinbase does offer a noncustodial wallet where you can trade on Coinbase and hold your Bitcoins yourself.

[2] This is sort of a dumb joke but presumably a new generation is coming up just intuitively assuming that $1 = €1 = £1, which is very convenient. In the olden days the values were all different!

[3] In this dumb model I am eliding the *exchange* function and just assuming the bank acts as principal, though in fact Coinbase mostly operates as an exchange. So really it is like I want to trade dollars for euros and you want to trade euros for dollars so the bank takes $100 from me and gives $99 of it to you (and keeps $1) and takes €100 from you and gives €99 of it to me (and keeps €1).

[4] The lower bound is that they take it and lend it to the Federal Reserve, which is called “narrow banking” and basically as good as keeping it in envelopes, but which is strongly disfavored by US authorities.

>> No.52326990

>>52326968
[5] I want to be careful to say that I am not an expert on Coinbase’s business models and do not want to, like, endorse it. Don’t go put all your money in Coinbase because I said so or anything! And in fact Coinbase does have other revenue models besides charging trading fees, some of which are more run-vulnerable than what I say in the text. (Most notably, there *are* loan products. “We provide retail and commercial loans to qualified customers secured by their crypto asset holdings on our platform, which exposes us to the risk of our borrowers’ inability to repay such loans,” says a risk factor in Coinbase’s Form 10-K.) But Coinbase’s claims this week, and its securities filings, suggest that the dominant business model is boringly segregating customer money and charging fees.

[6] Well, I can, using futures, but futures are just a synthetic form of the leveraged transaction in the text. If I short Bitcoin at $20,000 via futures and put up $4,000 of collateral, that is a leveraged trade; if Bitcoin goes above $24,000 then my collateral is gone. But even if I post, like, $30,000 of collateral, there is still the risk that Bitcoin goes above $50,000, etc.

>> No.52326996
File: 143 KB, 396x432, 82B28C6B-30E9-465D-B2D2-D4BC2751FB5E.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52326996

>>52325504
This happens cause of Jews. Simple, evil people.
Mashinsky and SBF, two kikes robbing everyone. It goes something like this if I had to guess.
>kikes want crypto regulation, can’t have the goyim getting rich freeing themselves and might as well rob them in the process
>shill their own shit coins then pull the rug
>push for regulations due to people continuously getting fucked
>continue being kikes and ruining everything they touch.

>> No.52327019

>>52326990
[7] As a legal/contractual matter, you may or may not have “recourse” against her — you may or may not be able to sue her for the extra money— but as a practical matter you are a crypto exchange, don’t count on getting that money back.

[8] In modern US stock markets, buybacks are the principal way of returning profits to shareholders, meaning that the connection between stock prices and corporate profits is in practice “when there are profits the company buys back stock” — just like with FTT.

[9] They’ll probably lend you like $100 against $200 of their stock, in an ordinary-course transaction; they just won’t do too much of it.

>> No.52327074

>>52326996
No, it's what happens when people see an unregulated financial system based on venture-capital-esque "rosy pictures of a magical future" currency, and invest in it, and it turns out they couldn't provide an alternative banking system after all and it all begins to crumble apart.

>> No.52327172

>aaaaa it's over
no one in this board ever went through the shitstorm that was mt. gox huh.
>>52327074
so the TL;DR version is to not have a shit banking system with magic internet beans? got it.

>> No.52327270

>>52325176
Buttcoin will be sub 5k in January. Screenshot this post. It's gonna happen. All the HODLERs are fucking retards that got played by the whales.

>> No.52327301

>>52326259
>>52326615

same sentiment. thanks, anon
I'm a huge fan of Levine's as well. his stuff always makes sense

>> No.52327322

>>52325216
It's not over.
There's gonna be a short squeeze, then we go lower.

>> No.52327333

>>52327172
Turns out we had a digital banking system all along, that didn't devour a small nation's worth of electricity all along. It had a few centuries worth of hard-learned rules to it; and crypto victims are along for the wild ride as crypto re-learns them all while everyone and their brother tries to rip them off.

>> No.52327363

>>52327301
He's also not shy about admitting when he's wrong, a rarity in those circles. And he isn't trying to sell anyone anything.

>> No.52327366

With Jews you lose

>> No.52327437

>>52327301
Oh look, another kike being shilled on /biz/. Lol this place is so manipulated so everyone here just gets wrecked. Try something for me guys, do the opposite of whatever is shilled here

>> No.52327496
File: 167 KB, 918x448, 1636667587426.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52327496

>>52325176
nothing is ever truly over, a fitting example for these times is that after you die; you burn in hell for eternity.

>> No.52327510

>>52327437
Levine doesn't shill anything. He's an ex-Goldman Sachs guy who does a free newsletter that he also sells to Bloomberg.
He specifically endorses no product, gives no investing advice whatsoever. He merely writes entertaining and educational articles about the day's business shenanigans.

>> No.52327555

>>52327510
Awesome, hopefully he can write a nice article on how the members of his tribe are robbing people for millions and destroying crypto, and everything else they touch for that matter

>> No.52327633

>>52327555
I see, you only get your business news from Poos, Taiwanese Scoundrels and shady Crypto Shills.
Maybe try reading or listening to someone who ISN'T trying to sell you magic beans, chuddie.

>> No.52327693

>>52325216
Crypto is over, it was tulip bulbs all along

>> No.52327726

>>52327693
Some lessons have to be learned ever century or so.

>> No.52327728

>>52327633
Been in the green this whole bear market, I don’t get rekt by kikes

>> No.52327736

>>52327693
At least you can plant Tulips for some stunning gardens.

>> No.52327752

>>52327728
Find someone who'll listen and care.

>> No.52327762
File: 163 KB, 852x854, 1634788461583.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52327762

From here on out I max bid CBDC, I don't give a fuck. DeFi can suck my nuts.

I am GOING to make it. You hear me?

>> No.52327768
File: 84 KB, 1034x1293, 1641623770214.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52327768

>>52325176
Yes

>> No.52327778
File: 53 KB, 1125x938, DBBF6E94-AD9B-4F16-B390-CD7B402AD56A.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52327778

companies still investing in pic related so no

>> No.52327782

>>52325176
Test

>> No.52327941

>>52327437
lol, I'm also a marxist if that gets your goat. And I don't even invest!

>> No.52328033

>>52326113
Thanks I read every word

>> No.52328208

It is only the start anon
Hope you bought the Dip we won't see prices like these for a while
Loaded up on btc and matic already been watching my bags pump for the last hour

>> No.52328451

>>52328208
...people said this at the 21k "floor", the 20k "floor", the 19k "floor", the 18k "floor". None of these floors were very long ago.
Good luck I guess?

>> No.52329432

>>52327074
There is no defense for kikes.

>> No.52329517

>>52325710
Yes and it was like that last crypto winter. This is nothing shocking. My bestfriend told me to load up when BTC was .90c and I didn’t listen and he was a normie in an apartment with three dudes, then he flew me to his office tower in Tokyo when it mooned in the 20ks and begged me to get into BTC during the crypto winter and that he had a job lined up for me in the company with BTC equity when it was 2K after the 25k crash and I didn’t listen, and now he’s too busy and mad at me to hang anymore on talk shows with his BTC ATM company and it’s the same FUD and normies whispering in my ear as last time. Nah I’m good, I know this is just crypto winter, the fundamentals haven’t changed, the retards are still being retards and MtGox didn’t destroy the scene last time. I doubt this is anywhere near the bottom but I’ve stopped buying stocks 1.5 years ago since the Feds announcement they were going to raise loans two summers ago and have been going hard on crypto (and by crypto I mean eth and BTC) ever since and knew this shit would pop 20% away from 100k like how GME popped 20% away from hopium numbers.
This is MtGox all over again. Don’t buy shitcoins.

>> No.52329683

>>52328208
>we won't see prices like these for a while
Indeed, because BTC will be at 8k next month. Don’t buy assets currently caught in a death spiral.

>> No.52329746

>>52329683
This. I buy in the hundreds at a time because I can afford it but I’m waiting for the bottom which is nowhere close.