The other week it dropped from a high of just over $19,000 to $14,000 overnight (approx figures).
However, it's not for faint hearts, that's for sure.

Join the bloody clan - mine expires today and I can't do anything about it.IanMcL wrote:All my brother in law wants to do is pay his subs to sportsmania! Lost in space!
Nope, it's the 5th 30%+ correction this year.IAmAClaret wrote:Has the Bitcoin bubble burst?
1 Bitcoin has lost £2,000 in 12 hours.
ElectroClaret wrote:Don't think that's owt to worry about.(unless, of course, it keeps on dropping.)
The other week it dropped from a high of just over $19,000 to $14,000 overnight (approx figures).
However, it's not for faint hearts, that's for sure.
From CNBC: http://www.cnbc.com/2017/12/21/goldman- ... -says.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;CombatClaret wrote:Nope, it's the 5th 30%+ correction this year.
Still up 65% for the month and Goldman Sachs is looking to start a trading desk.
What Dimon says and what JP does are two completely unrelated things. Not surprising though as he does have a big horse in the race which is to keep centralized banking as the status quo. I agree though he will do anything to make his company a buck so If clients want it they will trade it and skim off a fee.Paul Waine wrote:I'm still with Jamie Dimon, JP Morgan: "bitcoin won't end well for investors." (Not seen anything new from JD on crypto since Sept-17).
aggi wrote:A price correction has been predicted for a few weeks.
I know someone who is involved with a serious group of bitcoin owners (well over a billion dollars in value) and there were rumours they were going to dump their coins and buy back in cheaper.
Illegal in most markets but fine for bitcoin. I still reckon it will hit $25k this year. I'd be tempted to buy now if you're interested.
Apologies if this has been answered already, but did your mate ever get shut?dushanbe wrote:The value of 1 bitcoin has this morning passed $10,000 and is currently around $10,800. A work colleague is sat on 6.8 of these and is frantically trying to get shut.
I got £100 worth at $2.20 a coin the other day, gutted wasn't quite on the ball to get in at the start of December when it was really cheap. Where do you reckon Ripple could get to price wise over the coming weeks/months? I'm hoping Coinbase add it to their crypto offering, that should see the price spike a bit.FCBurnley wrote:Happy with my XRP I bought at 20 cents. Hope you guys listened
No one suggesting any panic here. Xmas slump indeed, investor take some profits, period of consolidation and support etc.AngleseyClaret wrote:Why are you all panicking, it dropped because of the Xmas period, it is now going up again and I expect it to climb even more
Ripple at $3.10 now, so your doing good.SammyBoy wrote:I got £100 worth at $2.20 a coin the other day, gutted wasn't quite on the ball to get in at the start of December when it was really cheap. Where do you reckon Ripple could get to price wise over the coming weeks/months? I'm hoping Coinbase add it to their crypto offering, that should see the price spike a bit.
The word is that it will be on coinbase within 1 week. I think $ 10 this year will happen. My adviser ( who got me in at 20 cents) says $25=$100 long term. My advise is stick with it. I am in for long term. Good luckSammyBoy wrote:I got £100 worth at $2.20 a coin the other day, gutted wasn't quite on the ball to get in at the start of December when it was really cheap. Where do you reckon Ripple could get to price wise over the coming weeks/months? I'm hoping Coinbase add it to their crypto offering, that should see the price spike a bit.
I'll have 0.02 - thanks.dsr wrote:dsrcoins are on sale for £1 apiece. I have just created a million of them and there won't be any more. The shareholders will be listed on paper in both my safes so it's absolutely secure, and if anyone wants to check the validity of a share they can send me an email.
Who's buying?
They're unsplittable. That's part of the security system. £1 each, no fractions, cash only. I expect them to reach £100 by the end of the month and £1200-£1500 by Christmas. It's money for nothing.bfccrazy wrote:I'll have 0.02 - thanks.
SammyBoy wrote:I got £100 worth at $2.20 a coin the other day, gutted wasn't quite on the ball to get in at the start of December when it was really cheap. Where do you reckon Ripple could get to price wise over the coming weeks/months? I'm hoping Coinbase add it to their crypto offering, that should see the price spike a bit.
FCBurnley wrote:The word is that it will be on coinbase within 1 week. I think $ 10 this year will happen. My adviser ( who got me in at 20 cents) says $25=$100 long term. My advise is stick with it. I am in for long term. Good luck
“So, That’s the End of Bitcoin Then” – Forbes Article, June 20th 2011scouseclaret wrote:All I would add is that when there is a 4 page thread on a football message board devoted to the subject, we’re probably getting close to the end.
So where is the money coming from to generate all the profit for everyone?dsr wrote:They're unsplittable. That's part of the security system. £1 each, no fractions, cash only. I expect them to reach £100 by the end of the month and £1200-£1500 by Christmas. It's money for nothing.
Same as all the other cryptocurrencies. I get the money from selling the original million, and the investors get the money for selling them on to other investors. They don't have any actual value. Like I said, it's money for nothing.Leisure wrote:So where is the money coming from to generate all the profit for everyone?
They don't - they go down the pub to tell their mates how their 500k of butcoins are having a minor blip and will be back up to 600k soon enough.Leisure wrote:
I didn't! I invest in cryptocurrency because I believe in decentralisation. I'm sick of the rich getting richer and having all the power. Ripple is not a decentralised cryptocurrency and is a puppet of the very thing that cryptocurrency tries to avoid - financial institutions. There are plenty of cryptocurrencies to make good profit from - most decentralised. I'll stick with thoseFCBurnley wrote:Happy with my XRP I bought at 20 cents. Hope you guys listened
I'm glad you understand market cap and circulating supply. There are a lot of people investing in the likes of Ripple, Cardano, Tron etc because they see that the price per coin is low and hope to get rich if it hits Bitcoin level of price. They don't understand this in relation to circulating supply. Bitcoin is valuable because it's rare (many Bitcoins have been burned and lost etc). I'm not even joking - I've spoken to people who actually thought this. It's frightening and probably what will make things pop sooner or later. It's why I'm glad I've invested in projects that I've thoroughly researched (read white papers, researched team members etc).SammyBoy wrote:I don't really know much about Crypto, I was just given a tip off that Ripple was projected to increase in value so I decided to lump £100 on it. From a layman perspective I think it'll struggle to hit the crazy numbers per coin that other cryptos have because there's so many more ripple coins out there, so demand won't ever be great enough to trigger a huge price rise. Who knows though, I hope to make at least a few hundred quid
Is there actually any technology or physical product behind it? If not, you sound very much like Cardano. I'll stick with those that have proven products!dsr wrote:dsrcoins are on sale for £1 apiece. I have just created a million of them and there won't be any more. The shareholders will be listed on paper in both my safes so it's absolutely secure, and if anyone wants to check the validity of a share they can send me an email.
Who's buying?
It's why I keep telling people to research projects and don't invest in vapourware. The likes of NEO, WABI, REQ, XRB, ARK, OMG and NAV all have bright futures and plenty of room to grow, in my opinion.aggi wrote:What $1k in each of the top 10 coins on Jan 1st 2017 would have done by Jan 1st 2018.
I can't see the same happening this year but some coins will continue to increase as others fall by the wayside.
People keep referencing the dotcom bubble suggesting that cryptocurrency will go the same way. The likelihood is that it will, a large number of the coins that don't have a good plan will fail. Those that are successful though will likely be very successful.
Debatable though. There may be a 4-page thread but ask anyone to explain the blockchain, Ethereum or an ICO and most won't know where to start. However, we will see Bitcoin die a slow death in the coming year or two.scouseclaret wrote:There are plenty of reasons why Bitcoin is a bubble that, sooner or later, will burst, many of which have no doubt been aired already.
All I would add is that when there is a 4 page thread on a football message board devoted to the subject, we’re probably getting close to the end.
What you're saying shows a clear lack of understanding regarding cryptocurrency. Saying that no cryptocurrency has any value is factually incorrect and just plain lazy. There are physical products behind some cryptocurrencies. One example is WABI. They make anti-counterfeit labels based on RFID technology. Their tokens can be used to purchase products in physical stores across China. There are many more examples of cryptocurrencies that have actual value and product behind them. I'm the first to admit that there are many poor coins with little substance to them. However, I encourage you to explore a little and find the gems rather than spreading false information.dsr wrote:Same as all the other cryptocurrencies. I get the money from selling the original million, and the investors get the money for selling them on to other investors. They don't have any actual value. Like I said, it's money for nothing.
I'm sure there's some sort of patent or trademark issue here. I was the first to steal the idea of cryptocoins and issue them on paper - stealing my stolen idea is a shabby way of doing business!Paul Waine wrote:,
Hi Leisure, I'm planning on stepping in to "buy out" all the last investors. I will issue them all a new "coin." I'm going to base it on dsr's "dsr" - but I'll have solved the decimal fractions issue. And, I'll issue everyone with some real paper to "mark" the exchange. I've already started negotiations with a well known paper supplier for this purpose. (I can't say any more at this stage).
Happy investing, everyone.
Nothing at all. Well, I might print the list of owners on computer paper if that helps. But like I've already said twice, it's money for nothing!IndigoLake wrote:Is there actually any technology or physical product behind it? If not, you sound very much like Cardano. I'll stick with those that have proven products!
Hi dsr, I'd be very happy to share everything we make with you - if we can create "paper scrap" coins.dsr wrote:I'm sure there's some sort of patent or trademark issue here. I was the first to steal the idea of cryptocoins and issue them on paper - stealing my stolen idea is a shabby way of doing business!
(You'll be telling me next you've got the Bank of England involved)
Crwon, CRW, is another interesting one. Decent growth and quite an involved community.IndigoLake wrote:It's why I keep telling people to research projects and don't invest in vapourware. The likes of NEO, WABI, REQ, XRB, ARK, OMG and NAV all have bright futures and plenty of room to grow, in my opinion.
Advise him to stay with his Ripple. They have a fair way to climb yet. I will take a look at Tron.ebby wrote:My son has been buying Ripple, got in when they were $0.31 & just bought $3K worth of Tron yesterday- profits from selling Bitcoin.
I don't know anything about Crown. I'll take a look.aggi wrote:Crwon, CRW, is another interesting one. Decent growth and quite an involved community.