Avatar
Toby McMann
cfc09e2c78fe9d5566c6c0f85cfd433dde0c95ec40b44e12a1ecf900fc373afd
Bitcoin enthusiast | Nostr only Nosce te ipsum

Expect #Bitcoin hashrate to grow exponentially, together with fees, as people realize the value of preferred access to the world's most secure and immutable ledger. It is all just starting.

In upcoming broadcasts, can you cover Ocean, and it's role in the competition for scarce block space, aligning hashrate with the monetary use case for the network (versus bigger pools, whose incentives diverge)?

Normies in their moment of enlightenment.

#bitcoin

https://www.wired.com/2011/11/mf-bitcoin/

It is wild to go back and read the 2011 Wired Magazine article on #bitcoin. Well written and researched. A dozen years later many still don't get it.

Replying to Avatar Juraj

This is one of the most important charts to understand. People want to diversify, but all they see are fiat profits. If you measure in hard money, S&P500 did not rise since the 1970s bull. And if we don't count the dot com bubble, the market is more or less sideways.

I'm not saying you can't make money in S&P500. Gold grams cost averaging would probably made some profits, and you would make some amount in dividends.

What I'm saying that traditional "invest in the whole market and you will be profitable" is actually a fiat illusion. Add to that the fact that holding the asset itself is full of political risk - your holdings are managed by a custodian and can be confiscated.

Another problem is that the illusion of profit (profit in fiat terms) is treated as taxable income. You would pay lots of taxes without actually increasing your purchasing power.

Looking at it, I would rather just hold gold. In many countries, gold appreciation is not taxed, you can hold it yourself, thus vastly decreasing political risk. And you can also use it as a collateral for a fiat loan, which is quite nice in inflationary fiat environment.

And if diversifying, diversify into Bitcoin, not among fiat assets, because there, the fiat / political risk is correlated.

If you don't change anything else though, I suggest looking at your portfolio in terms of gold grams and sats, that removes the illusion of fiat profits and you are getting a better look at how your savings / investments actually perform.

https://nostrcheck.me/media/public/6d5269bd10131577339341e439cbe90cc1695db199fba3341dded47af2e212fc.webp

Most people's minds are blown when they realize that S&P 500 largely just acts as a volatile hedge to monetary inflation, which is also volatile.

nostr:nevent1qqs2jjl8s9kr80hj65mazdhmjz592lvefj0qswsvunu4ngwtups434gpz4mhxue69uhk2er9dchxummnw3ezumrpdejqygx6kmrqvhzrnwd6lv9s78l45rrgyuauuhqetxjptzkk5uy9rag8kcpsgqqqqqqs0527xl

In free society, government does not own or define money. #bitcoin #gold

They will have to cut rates, but probably not before interest expense goes parabolic.

Replying to Avatar Dylan LeClair

Thoroughly enjoyed joining nostr:npub1s5yq6wadwrxde4lhfs56gn64hwzuhnfa6r9mj476r5s4hkunzgzqrs6q7z on his podcast once again.

We talked about AI, bleeding fixed income, the $BTC market, paper gold vs BTC derivatives, implications of a potential ETF, BitVM, and other exciting developments in the #bitcoin space.

Link: https://www.theinvestorspodcast.com/bitcoin-fundamentals/dylan-leclair-bitcoin-market-overview/

Thanks for the great update. One thought: more nostr, less X, please. Make it a New Years resolution. You don't need the walled garden. Trust in decentralization.

If anyone needs help staying humble, just remember Bitcoin is still down 50% from the ATH.