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Gold: 3 reasons it’s like Bitcoin – MSN Money

Gold: 3 reasons it’s like Bitcoin
MSN Money
And then there’s Bitcoin, the digital currency. I’ll get to that in a second. If you are honest, ask yourself what real utility is there for gold? Don’t recite what the so-called analysts or experts tell you about gold being the only real currency in

and more »


Gold: 3 reasons it's like Bitcoin
MSN Money
And then there's Bitcoin, the digital currency. I'll get to that in a second. If you are honest, ask yourself what real utility is there for gold? Don't recite what the so-called analysts or experts tell you about gold being the only real currency in ...

and more »

Flash crash – and it wasn’t bitcoin this time

So it turns out traditional markets aren’t as stable as everyone thought. The S&P 500 – an index of the 500 largest companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange – dropped 13 points in a matter of seconds earlier today as a result of a hacked AP twitter account. The tweet in question described an explosion that allegedly injured the president. The flash crash was the equivalent of over $100 billion in market cap disappearing almost instantly. For all of the concerns with bitcoin’s price instability, this would have evaporated 100x the bitcoin market cap due to a vulnerability completely unrelated to financial transactions. Bitcoin is in it’s infancy, but this just goes to show that some of the criticism is unduly applied. Just like we’ve seen with Mt. Gox DDoS attacks, someone likely stood to make a profit by the destabilization of broader financial markets. The formula is simple: post a shocking news bit from a trusted source, wait for the market to nose dive, buy securities, profit immediately on…

The post Flash crash – and it wasn’t bitcoin this time appeared first on The Genesis Block.

Id4whitehouse

So it turns out traditional markets aren’t as stable as everyone thought. The S&P 500 – an index of the 500 largest companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange – dropped 13 points in a matter of seconds earlier today as a result of a hacked AP twitter account. The tweet in question described an explosion that allegedly injured the president.

AP_news

The hacked tweet

Flash_crash

The market’s response

The flash crash was the equivalent of over $100 billion in market cap disappearing almost instantly. For all of the concerns with bitcoin’s price instability, this would have evaporated 100x the bitcoin market cap due to a vulnerability completely unrelated to financial transactions. Bitcoin is in it’s infancy, but this just goes to show that some of the criticism is unduly applied.

Just like we’ve seen with Mt. Gox DDoS attacks, someone likely stood to make a profit by the destabilization of broader financial markets. The formula is simple: post a shocking news bit from a trusted source, wait for the market to nose dive, buy securities, profit immediately on recovery. Keep in mind one key difference between this attack and a bitcoin attack: authorities will be actively hunting down the cause of this attack for a series of offenses, including public market manipulation. The same governments that regulate monetary supply also enforce market regulations. Everything comes with it’s trade-offs.

The post Flash crash – and it wasn’t bitcoin this time appeared first on The Genesis Block.

The Pirate Bay now accepting Bitcoin donations – Wired.co.uk

The Pirate Bay now accepting Bitcoin donationsWired.co.ukThe BitTorrent site has hitherto been funded by other methods such as banner advertising but, as the digital currency makes it far harder to trace funding, Bitcoins are a viable option for those …


The Pirate Bay now accepting Bitcoin donations
Wired.co.uk
The BitTorrent site has hitherto been funded by other methods such as banner advertising but, as the digital currency makes it far harder to trace funding, Bitcoins are a viable option for those who want to support the site anonymously despite (or ...

and more »

Inside the Race to Build the World’s Fastest Bitcoin Miner – Wired

Inside the Race to Build the World’s Fastest Bitcoin Miner
Wired
There’s more than one way to make money from the Bitcoin craze, which has seen the value of the digital currency increase more than six-fold over the past few months. You can do it the old-fashioned way: buying low and selling high. But for the


Inside the Race to Build the World's Fastest Bitcoin Miner
Wired
There's more than one way to make money from the Bitcoin craze, which has seen the value of the digital currency increase more than six-fold over the past few months. You can do it the old-fashioned way: buying low and selling high. But for the ...

Will this Bitcoin stuff amount to anything more than a hill of beans? – Digital Trends


Digital Trends

Will this Bitcoin stuff amount to anything more than a hill of beans?
Digital Trends
I was perusing the interwebs the other day, looking at some good ole fashion car porn – mmm, Audi R8, oh yeah, Ferrari 458 – when I came across a story about a man who bought a Porsche for three hundred Bitcoins. Three hundred of anything didn’t sound


Digital Trends

Will this Bitcoin stuff amount to anything more than a hill of beans?
Digital Trends
I was perusing the interwebs the other day, looking at some good ole fashion car porn – mmm, Audi R8, oh yeah, Ferrari 458 – when I came across a story about a man who bought a Porsche for three hundred Bitcoins. Three hundred of anything didn't sound ...

The Fiat Emperor Has No Clothes

By Jon Matonis
Forbes
Thursday, April 18, 2013

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmatonis/2013/04/18/the-fiat-emperor-has-no-clothes/

A piece from Paul Krugman in The New York Times
this week criticizes bitcoin for being antisocial and for not having a
State-controlled supply while secretly admiring its powerful
abstractness.

As a complicit minion in the State’s appropriation of the monetary unit, Krugman perpetuates ‘The State Theory of Money’ myth that the sovereign’s power to collect taxes and declare legal tender imbues a currency with ultimate value.

While that may be a reason to acquire a certain amount of government
fiat currency, it is a transitory value because in the end it is still
based on a State-sanctioned illusion. Anyone who has visited a weekend
flea market has noticed the old coin and currency collector displays
filled with past experiments in national fiat money. Those paper notes
were at one time valued for something too.

We don’t want a pristine monetary standard untouched by human frailty
as Krugman claims. We want freedom in the monetary standard untouched by the politicizing process.

In a Krugman world, centralized management of the money
supply is preferable to a market-based outcome because the
academically-informed economists will serve the best interests of the
economy at large. However, our monetary overlords possess no special
knowledge or secret sauce that justifies dictatorial control over money
any more than it would justify dictatorial control over the market for
something like soda beverages or dog food. Trust in mathematics trumps
trust in central bankers.

The question of political control over a monetary system is the
greatest litmus test for discovering those that seek control over
others. Usually, it will be cloaked in terms like full employment, price
stability, temporary stimulus, quantitative easing, and economic
growth, but manipulation of the money supply serves only to favor the
issuers of that particular monetary unit.

Money has a lot in common with religion. At some level, it requires a
huge leap of faith. Yes, a belief in gold requires this too as the
non-monetary value assigned to gold is probably no more than 5% of its
market price. However, this is also what makes bitcoin the ultimate social
money because for its value it merely requires others, not the law.
Money is already the most viral thing on the planet and the network
effect exponentially reinforces that.

Krugman actually struggles to assert that bitcoin is antisocial
because he cites economist Paul Samuelson who once declared that money
is a “social contrivance,” not something that stands outside society.
Samuelson is absolutely correct on that point and bitcoin stands firmly
within society. It is no one’s right to question why some place value on
bitcoin and some do not since all value is subjective. The rationale
for assigning value to bitcoin is as varied as the human fabric itself.

In this context, society can be defined as those mutual users willing
to agree to a medium of exchange and a store of value. Since bitcoin,
just as the Internet, recognizes no political boundaries, Krugman
resists seeing the global monetary unit as something social. Krugman sees society only as a multitude of aggregated fiefdoms where he is the emperor’s cherished tailor.

Though, just like the untainted child in the Hans Christian Andersen
fairy tale, some of us are beginning to notice. It’s not the illusion
itself that so offends our sensibilities, but more the notion that a
competitive illusion is not to be permitted. If a free market illusion
voluntarily agreed to from the bottom up is so desperately feared, then
the protectors of the State-sanctioned illusion must not have the most
benevolent of motives in store for us plebeians.

I don’t know about you, but I for one can stand up and exclaim: “the fiat emperor has no clothes!” What if more of us did?

By Jon Matonis
Forbes
Thursday, April 18, 2013

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmatonis/2013/04/18/the-fiat-emperor-has-no-clothes/

A piece from Paul Krugman in The New York Times
this week criticizes bitcoin for being antisocial and for not having a
State-controlled supply while secretly admiring its powerful
abstractness.

As a complicit minion in the State’s appropriation of the monetary unit, Krugman perpetuates ‘The State Theory of Money’ myth that the sovereign’s power to collect taxes and declare legal tender imbues a currency with ultimate value.

While that may be a reason to acquire a certain amount of government
fiat currency, it is a transitory value because in the end it is still
based on a State-sanctioned illusion. Anyone who has visited a weekend
flea market has noticed the old coin and currency collector displays
filled with past experiments in national fiat money. Those paper notes
were at one time valued for something too.

We don’t want a pristine monetary standard untouched by human frailty
as Krugman claims. We want freedom in the monetary standard untouched by the politicizing process.

In a Krugman world, centralized management of the money
supply is preferable to a market-based outcome because the
academically-informed economists will serve the best interests of the
economy at large. However, our monetary overlords possess no special
knowledge or secret sauce that justifies dictatorial control over money
any more than it would justify dictatorial control over the market for
something like soda beverages or dog food. Trust in mathematics trumps
trust in central bankers.

The question of political control over a monetary system is the
greatest litmus test for discovering those that seek control over
others. Usually, it will be cloaked in terms like full employment, price
stability, temporary stimulus, quantitative easing, and economic
growth, but manipulation of the money supply serves only to favor the
issuers of that particular monetary unit.

Money has a lot in common with religion. At some level, it requires a
huge leap of faith. Yes, a belief in gold requires this too as the
non-monetary value assigned to gold is probably no more than 5% of its
market price. However, this is also what makes bitcoin the ultimate social
money because for its value it merely requires others, not the law.
Money is already the most viral thing on the planet and the network
effect exponentially reinforces that.

Krugman actually struggles to assert that bitcoin is antisocial
because he cites economist Paul Samuelson who once declared that money
is a “social contrivance,” not something that stands outside society.
Samuelson is absolutely correct on that point and bitcoin stands firmly
within society. It is no one’s right to question why some place value on
bitcoin and some do not since all value is subjective. The rationale
for assigning value to bitcoin is as varied as the human fabric itself.

In this context, society can be defined as those mutual users willing
to agree to a medium of exchange and a store of value. Since bitcoin,
just as the Internet, recognizes no political boundaries, Krugman
resists seeing the global monetary unit as something social. Krugman sees society only as a multitude of aggregated fiefdoms where he is the emperor’s cherished tailor.

Though, just like the untainted child in the Hans Christian Andersen
fairy tale, some of us are beginning to notice. It’s not the illusion
itself that so offends our sensibilities, but more the notion that a
competitive illusion is not to be permitted. If a free market illusion
voluntarily agreed to from the bottom up is so desperately feared, then
the protectors of the State-sanctioned illusion must not have the most
benevolent of motives in store for us plebeians.

I don’t know about you, but I for one can stand up and exclaim: “the fiat emperor has no clothes!” What if more of us did?

4 Alternatives for Playing the Bitcoin Bubble – Motley Fool

4 Alternatives for Playing the Bitcoin Bubble
Motley Fool
By now you’ve heard of Bitcoin, the e-currency that’s driving speculators mad with greed. Expect plenty of broken hearts (and busted portfolios) when the rush is over. But that doesn’t mean you can’t invest in the underlying business need that gave

and more »


4 Alternatives for Playing the Bitcoin Bubble
Motley Fool
By now you've heard of Bitcoin, the e-currency that's driving speculators mad with greed. Expect plenty of broken hearts (and busted portfolios) when the rush is over. But that doesn't mean you can't invest in the underlying business need that gave ...

and more »

Bitcoin The New Online Form Of Currency – KMVT


KMVT

Bitcoin The New Online Form Of Currency
KMVT
Bitcoin remains unregulated and for the most part almost completely anonymous. “The price changes constantly. And it changes in relation to the person that is selling it to you. There is no regulation here. And no one can identify to whom this is going

and more »


KMVT

Bitcoin The New Online Form Of Currency
KMVT
Bitcoin remains unregulated and for the most part almost completely anonymous. "The price changes constantly. And it changes in relation to the person that is selling it to you. There is no regulation here. And no one can identify to whom this is going ...

and more »

Wild Wild West of bitcoin gallops smartly into town – The Business Times – Business Times (subscription)

Business Times (subscription)Wild Wild West of bitcoin gallops smartly into town – The Business TimesBusiness Times (subscription)While bitcoin has many uses – being a store of value or a medium of exchange for goods and services – its ability to cross…


Business Times (subscription)

Wild Wild West of bitcoin gallops smartly into town - The Business Times
Business Times (subscription)
While bitcoin has many uses - being a store of value or a medium of exchange for goods and services - its ability to cross borders without involving banks is proving very popular here. Conventional remittance currently involves up to three banks - the ...

Corruption Currents: From New Aid For Syrian Rebels to Bitcoin Compliance … – Wall Street Journal (blog)

Wall Street Journal (blog)Corruption Currents: From New Aid For Syrian Rebels to Bitcoin Compliance …Wall Street Journal (blog)The exchanges that buy and sell Bitcoin are scrambling to beef up their anti-money laundering compliance processes but it m…


Wall Street Journal (blog)

Corruption Currents: From New Aid For Syrian Rebels to Bitcoin Compliance ...
Wall Street Journal (blog)
The exchanges that buy and sell Bitcoin are scrambling to beef up their anti-money laundering compliance processes but it may not be enough for them to keep access to the banking services they need to operate. (Thomson Reuters Corporate Compliance ...

Bitcoins back above $120 as wild swings continue – MarketWatch (blog)

Bitcoins back above $120 as wild swings continue
MarketWatch (blog)
Bitcoin prices have rebounded from a sharp downturn earlier this month, and are back above $120, notes Nicholas Colas at ConvergEx. The electronic currency, which Colas calls “the Esperanto of money,” saw its prices surge as high as $260 earlier this


Bitcoins back above $120 as wild swings continue
MarketWatch (blog)
Bitcoin prices have rebounded from a sharp downturn earlier this month, and are back above $120, notes Nicholas Colas at ConvergEx. The electronic currency, which Colas calls “the Esperanto of money,” saw its prices surge as high as $260 earlier this ...

Beware of Bitcoin: Virtual coin, really hard to describe – Reynolds Center

Reynolds CenterBeware of Bitcoin: Virtual coin, really hard to describeReynolds CenterIt has been a volatile month for Bitcoin, the virtual currency that is based on a mathematic algorithm and can be used to buy everything from maple syrup to pornograp…


Reynolds Center

Beware of Bitcoin: Virtual coin, really hard to describe
Reynolds Center
It has been a volatile month for Bitcoin, the virtual currency that is based on a mathematic algorithm and can be used to buy everything from maple syrup to pornography. (Wall Street Journal). Please. Talk about comical. Whatever else it is, bitcoin ...

BitPay Expands Staff to Seven Full-Time Employees

ATLANTA — April 22, 2013 — BitPay Inc, the world’s leading payment processor for bitcoin, announces it now has seven full-time employees working in its Atlanta office, using the funding from its seed round in January and February.

(left-to-right) Crystal Campbell, Patrick Nagurny, Paige Freeman, Tony Gallippi, Ian Patton, Kevin McInturff, Stephen Pair

With a strong focus on technology infrastructure, two new Senior Software Engineers were added under the leadership of co-founder and CTO Stephen Pair, who architected and built the platform. BitPay is pleased to announce the addition of Patrick Nagurny and Ian Patton to their Engineering team.  This team will be improving the core product, making it more reliable, and adding new features.

Paige Freeman also joins BitPay as VP of Sales.  Paige has an Industrial Engineering degree from Georgia Tech, and has spent much of her career as a top Information Technology Sales Manager/Recruiter. Paige’s role at BitPay will be to increase the merchant base, transaction volume, and revenue.  Paige will report to co-founder and CEO Tony Gallippi.

Crystal Campbell has also joined BitPay full-time, relocating from Orlando where she worked at a local restaurant and bar which has been accepting bitcoin using BitPay.  Crystal will be handling Inside Sales and Customer Support in the Atlanta office, also reporting to Tony Gallippi.

The massive increase in transaction volume during March has generated a revenue boost for BitPay, and the company is using the funds to recruit more full-time employees.  The most explosive merchant sector has been companies selling precious metals for bitcoin, which has seen a 500% increase since March as investors chose to transfer their bitcoin gains into gold and silver.

BitPay continues to acquire new merchants at a rapid pace, with over 5,500 merchants now approved to accept bitcoin payments using their service.  Recently, organizations such as the National Libertarian Party and the Freedom of the Press Foundation have begun accepting bitcoin donations using BitPay. 

Overland Park Jeep dealership in Kansas City has also signed up with BitPay to accept bitcoin as payment for any new or used vehicle at their dealership.

The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) held a reception on April 17 to welcome BitPay to Atlanta.

About BitPay
BitPay is a Payment Service Provider (PSP) specializing in eCommerce, B2B, and enterprise solutions for virtual currencies. Visit https://bitpay.com.

Contact
Jan Jahosky
407-331-4699
[email protected]

ATLANTA — April 22, 2013 — BitPay Inc, the world’s leading payment processor for bitcoin, announces it now has seven full-time employees working in its Atlanta office, using the funding from its seed round in January and February.

(left-to-right) Crystal Campbell, Patrick Nagurny, Paige Freeman, Tony Gallippi, Ian Patton, Kevin McInturff, Stephen Pair

With a strong focus on technology infrastructure, two new Senior Software Engineers were added under the leadership of co-founder and CTO Stephen Pair, who architected and built the platform. BitPay is pleased to announce the addition of Patrick Nagurny and Ian Patton to their Engineering team.  This team will be improving the core product, making it more reliable, and adding new features.

Paige Freeman also joins BitPay as VP of Sales.  Paige has an Industrial Engineering degree from Georgia Tech, and has spent much of her career as a top Information Technology Sales Manager/Recruiter. Paige’s role at BitPay will be to increase the merchant base, transaction volume, and revenue.  Paige will report to co-founder and CEO Tony Gallippi.

Crystal Campbell has also joined BitPay full-time, relocating from Orlando where she worked at a local restaurant and bar which has been accepting bitcoin using BitPay.  Crystal will be handling Inside Sales and Customer Support in the Atlanta office, also reporting to Tony Gallippi.

The massive increase in transaction volume during March has generated a revenue boost for BitPay, and the company is using the funds to recruit more full-time employees.  The most explosive merchant sector has been companies selling precious metals for bitcoin, which has seen a 500% increase since March as investors chose to transfer their bitcoin gains into gold and silver.

BitPay continues to acquire new merchants at a rapid pace, with over 5,500 merchants now approved to accept bitcoin payments using their service.  Recently, organizations such as the National Libertarian Party and the Freedom of the Press Foundation have begun accepting bitcoin donations using BitPay. 

Overland Park Jeep dealership in Kansas City has also signed up with BitPay to accept bitcoin as payment for any new or used vehicle at their dealership.

The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG) held a reception on April 17 to welcome BitPay to Atlanta.

About BitPay
BitPay is a Payment Service Provider (PSP) specializing in eCommerce, B2B, and enterprise solutions for virtual currencies. Visit https://bitpay.com.

Contact
Jan Jahosky
407-331-4699
[email protected]

Bitcoin Trading: Interpreting Order Books

In this article we will review how read a bitcoin order book, how to interpret a bitcoin order book, and how to spot common market manipulation techniques by properly understanding order book dynamics. What is an Order Book? An order book is a ledger containing all outstanding orders – instructions from traders to buy or […]

The post Bitcoin Trading: Interpreting Order Books appeared first on The Genesis Block.

In this article we will review how read a bitcoin order book, how to interpret a bitcoin order book, and how to spot common market manipulation techniques by properly understanding order book dynamics.

What is an Order Book?

No, the other kind of Ledger

No, the other kind of Ledger

An order book is a ledger containing all outstanding orders – instructions from traders to buy or sell bitcoin. An order to buy is called a “bid” and an order to sell is called an “ask.” Bids and asks are paired up as soon as their requirements are fulfilled, resulting in a trade. For introductory purposes there are two primary order types to know:

  1. Market order – buy or sell immediately for the best available price. These orders are filled by immediately pairing buyers and sellers with orders currently in the books.

  2. Limit order – buy or sell a set number of bitcoins at a specified price or better. An example order would be: Bid $1000 to buy ฿10 at $100.

Understanding order book volume

To understand how to interpret order books, we have to first understand how to read them. In the below, you can see current trading price and volume, as well as the bid and asks currently in the order book. The numbered green, red and yellow boxes were added for the purposes of this explanation.

The red boxes indicate sell orders and the green boxes indicate buy orders. For both sides of the order book (bid and ask / buy and sell) the annotated numbers indicate the following:

  1. The price level
  2. The total volume of bitcoin in the order book at that price level
  3. The cumulative volume of all orders between the current trading price and a given price level

The yellow box (#4) highlights a snapshot of the order book $2 above and below the current trading price (approximately $128). In this example, there are 124 BTC of bids at $126 and 344 BTC in cumulative bid volume between $126 and the current price of $128. If a trader were to place an order to sell 300 BTC at $126, they would be filled by 2.5 BTC at $128, 220.4 BTC at $127 and the remaining 77.1 BTC at $126.

volume chart

Order book depth (total quantity of orders) can be used as a way to quantify the market’s intentions to buy and sell. One way traders can view order book depth, in addition to the method above, is to use a depth chart that shows the cumulative bids and asks in the current market. This technique illustrates the total volume on the order books starting from the value of the latest transaction. In the depth chart below you can see bitcoin trading near $123.5 with bids starting at $122.5 and asks starting at $125. The $2.5 between the highest bid and lowest ask is known as the bid-ask spread.

The green and red lines continue upwards, showing the cumulative bids at any given price level, reflecting the same information as the previous chart we looked at, but with a better visual representation of the order book.

depth_chart

One important note is that the depth of orders is generally much smaller than actual trading volumes, especially during large moves. In the top half of the chart below, we can see several periods where the 1 hour volume was over ฿30,000, however there were relatively small net movements in the price (of only about $5). Compare this to the limit orders on the order book at the bottom of the chart – a ฿30,000 market order bid would move the price up $20 to $149.

So what is really happening here? Most traders are not leaving their orders on the books, but reacting to movements and timing in the market.  There is little reason for a trader to reveal his market expectations and trading positions when you can react almost instantly to market movements.

book_lie

Bid/Ask Walls

If a trader wants to place orders at pre-determined price points, he can do so automatically without showing his orders on the books by using simple trading software. That said, there are some advantages that would lead a trader to reveal his intentions by placing large, public limit orders.

One common technique is to place a large limit order called a “wall” – referred to as bid walls or ask walls, depending on the type of order. It is fairly common to see walls of ~฿1,000 at even dollar values; however large walls of ฿5,000 can have a significant impact on market sentiment. Large limit orders are often placed to advertise intention and to affect the distribution of orders around the wall (illustrated in the example below). Traders will often move orders ahead of the wall to get executed first.

Lets look at the recent reaction to a ฿5,700 bid wall placed at $123. Traders with orders to buy at a price below $123 observe the reduced likelihood that their limit orders would be filled and move orders ahead of the wall – we can see an almost ฿2,000 increase in orders at $124 and $125.  Then the trader removes the wall at $123, however the newer orders have remained:

Recognizing potential manipulation

As we’ve shown, an order book may not accurately represent a market – unlike historical data, current pricing and live trading volume. At any point before an order is executed (matched with a counterparty) it can be canceled. The temporary nature of order books makes analysis challenging and fraught with potential attempts at manipulation. Traders can place large limit orders that they have no intention of filling in an attempt to give the appearance of a desired market sentiment.

When smaller traders view a large wall ahead of them, the logical reaction is to move orders ahead of it to prevent the wall from absorbing all potential trades.  As others do this in mass, a second wall is created with legitimate orders. The manipulative trader effectively moved up the limit orders on the books, and increased the price people are willing to pay.  There are two potential motives for this:

  1. Selling – the trader is trying to reduce the size of his BTC position, he can influence a higher asking price before offloading his BTC. Watch for a fairly large sell order after the bid wall is removed to recognize this.

  2. Building support – the trader has already established a BTC position and is trying to reduce the vulnerability of a large sell order moving the market downward. Usually this scenario is followed by a fairly large BTC purchase and a lot of momentum higher.

Questions?

Thank you to Chris, one of our twitter followers, for requesting this order book overview. We appreciate feedback, so feel free to leave questions about this material in the comments below, or reach out to us on twitter @TheGenesisBlock.

twitter screen

 

The post Bitcoin Trading: Interpreting Order Books appeared first on The Genesis Block.