Reddit Posts
Do you think the people affected by the historical floods over the next five days will be buying, selling, or holding BTC?
How do you monitor positions + orderbooks across DEXs, CEXs, and other platforms?
Peter Brandt Highlights Bitcoin Price Pattern Key to Keeping BTC's Bull Trend Healthy
How do the largest hodlers of BTC store thier coins?
What percent of us do you think are hodling this way, Pros and Cons. Storage
Is it a common misconception that Bitcoins gain their value from the cost of electricity required to generate them?
BTC can't turn $1 into $10 in 2024 - yes it can, over and over
MSTR or miners for leveraged play? (and how is the halving supposed to be bullish for miners??)
BlackRock Bitcoin ETF has surpassed holdings worth over $2 billion, equivalent to more than 52,000 BTC.
BlackRock Bitcoin ETF has surpassed holdings worth over $2 billion, equivalent to more than 52,000 BTC.
Don't Get Rekt in This Bull Run: Remember the 2017 "Earn" Scams?
Don't Get Rekt in This Bull Run: Remember the 2017 "Earn" Scams?
BTCMinetrix | ERC-20 | Cloud App | Stake Tokens = Mine Bitcoin | Audited | Presale Is Almost Finished | Join Before Official Launch
Reminder: Bitcoin Was Invented to Replace the Current Flawed System, Not to Be Absorbed Into It. Stop getting excited about BlackRock and Fidelity accumulating more BTC every day, and be aware of what's coming.
I LOVE BTC logo design. Feel free to use it for any purpose. Design source files are in the comments.
Bitcoin As A Power Law: why BTC is predictable over the long run
ICYF: BTC ETFs can start advertising on Google from Today.
"Traditional" Investor here looking to diversify, should I buy a lot of BTC before the halving?
Mined BTC early, trying to figure out if recovery is possible...
Crypto Reporting (US) - Bitcoin and failing to report loses; Need help to fix this
BitcoinMinetrix | ERC-20 | Cloud Mining | Stake To Mine BTC | Audited & SAFU | Jump In Before Listing
Setting up a Node on a new N100 Mini PC, What do I need to Know?
Reminder: Bitcoin Was Invented to Replace the Current Flawed System, Not to Be Absorbed Into It. Stop getting excited about BlackRock and Fidelity accumulating more BTC every day, and be aware of what's coming.
The last deadline for an Ethereum ETF approval for the SEC is in May 2024, expect a stronger pump than the months before the BTC ETF approval
My last post was deleted: I heard you guys loud and clear
Why BTC will be sideways or downward for months..
ETF's price drop explained, and why the growing optimism!
Hey are you interested in BTC investment The BTC investment is that you will have to open a btc wallet and fund it and if you have it already then you’re already a winner What you will just do is that you will use $50-$200 $100-$300 $150-$400 $300-$500 $500-$1000 $1500-$2000 $2000-$3000
If Bitcoin Didn't Exist Where Would You Put Your Capital?
Navigating the BTC Market Shake-up: Understanding Grayscale's Move and the Dynamics of Weak vs. Strong Hands
Question about ETF -- are BTC traded or do they tend to be held?
I just saw my first Bitcoin ad on basic cable tv….
Hey are you interested in BTC investment The BTC investment is that you will have to open a btc wallet and fund it and if you have it already then you’re already a winner What you will just do is that you will use $50-$200 $100-$300 $150-$400 $300-$500 $500-$1000 $1500-$2000 $2000-$3000
Saudi Arabia to Match Satoshi Nakamoto's 1Million Bitcoin!
The previous Bull Run was pretty underwhelming.
Clarification on UTXOs / what am I misunderstanding re: consolidation?
Bitcoin Mempool Ordinal / BRC-20 / DataCarrier transaction comparison?
Have you ever wondered what Albert Einstein may have said about Bitcoin?
Have you ever wondered what Albert Einstein might have said about Bitcoin?
How long did it take you to understand why BTC really matters?
Is Bitcoin Finally Finding Firm Ground as Grayscale’s BTC ETF Outflows Calm Down?
Is Bitcoin Finally Finding Firm Ground as Grayscale’s BTC ETF Outflows Calm Down?
Joe Rogan learning BTC being the best store of value in the world 10yrs ago when BTC is 900$
1 year ago I ACTUALLY lost most of my Bitcoin in a boating accident.
BitcoinMinetrix | ERC-20 | Cloud Mining | Stake Tokens = Mine Bitcoin | Audited & Safe | Presale Is Almost Finished | Join Before Listing
Bitcoin Monthly 32 - Stay up to date with what matters
Pricing All Everyday Goods in BTC, From iPhone to Houses, Will Act as an Electroshock to Your Awareness of the Bitcoin Revolution.
Finding Remote International Jobs (Freelance or Salary) That Pay In BTC
After looking into Bitcoin for 1 month and reading A LOT of posts on this Reddit I have no clue if BTC will go to the moon or go to zero.
Does the fact that Coinbase holds custody of 8 out of the 11 spot BTC ETFs pose any risk?
Mentions
Take your total amount of BTC.. put half in cold storage.. keep half in ETF/Exchange.. move on with life.
can BTC just drop to 30 k already so I can buy a few more. PLEASE!
BTC and ETH maxis who are closeted XRP bag holders.
It's getting close to each other. What are we going to see if the current BTC price gets under de mining price. Than are miners losing on mining bitcoin.
How so? There's one opportunity to do it now, from 6th April you can't buy in ISA so it's now it never. Buying more BTC moving forward will be directly again. What's your reason for thinking it's dumb?
BTC atms are literally designed for this. Who honest uses them for honest things.
Dad of 3. Most assets in ETF. Bought 0.5 BTC for my kids. Hodl until 10 m. Fingers crossed.
Realistically you only need to stamp the first 4 letters of each word of your seed phrase - as they are unique enough that AI could help you workout/spell the rest , I got 4 complete words on 3 washers (both sides + numbered 1-6) & its unlikely your average low I.Q joe is going to even know what they are, I also have a back up wallet on an external harddrive (PW Protected, though I could put it in an encrypted vault folder) , as well I have my wallet copied/cloned/backed up on my P.C & Phone - protected by PW's & pins , soon everyone will have a BTC wallet they can tap cryptopayments to eachother, it does not have to be the same wallet but Electrum is perfect for my needs now, but updates will only improve over time
There are risks for both sides - it's why those platforms exist. You as the the individual need to make a decision on which one suits you best. There is always a trade-off between security and convenience. That said, I learned the hard way from Celsius, and never will I go back to keeping my BTC on anything except a hardware wallet.
Only 1 million BTC left to mine but don't worry it will take alot of time , so no need to worry but if you are worrying about FOMC meeting ( it's unpredictable ) so don't worry just HODL.
BTC is the way to go! There’s so much happening behind the scenes we’re yet to witness the true growth. I recently made this video on podcast where i talk about how Wall Street is quietly building its wealth on the blockchain. There’s a long long way to go https://youtu.be/00GAqxunl7E?si=sKE_rU0KBeVt2aas
Alden’s *Broken Money* is a gamechanger for understanding the 'Petrodollar' system. It’s hard to unsee the link between military presence and currency demand once you read it. Whether the collapse is 'next week' or 'next decade,' buying BTC isn't just a trade anymore, it's an insurance policy against a system that's clearly over-leveraged.
AXS was a shaky swing. Got in like Theo weekends before it fell off. I moved my BTC around. I was gong for 300 Into 1000… got up to 700 then that weekend I was like F pulled out at 500 🤷♂️
Post is by: StatisticianRare21 and the url/text [ ](https://goo.gl/GP6ppk)is: /r/CryptoMarkets/comments/1rrzte0/urgently_need_btc_seller/ BTC Buyer Buyer Nationality - US He needs in a discount price Only need seller to do A to B he will move USDT immediately. If anyone have any seller please inbox. *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/CryptoMarkets) if you have any questions or concerns.*
Yeah, I fortunately didn't lose any money in the incident but it opened my eyes to what could've happened. I had joined because of the BTC credit card rewards right around the time that they stopped depositing rewards to the interest account. So my BTC rewards and promotional bonus (might've been like $200) all went into their non-interest wallet account. After all the bankruptcy stuff wallet funds were returned 100%.
I have a swan BTC IRA. you can buy directly there. Though not sure if I am gonna keep it. I feel like I got bait n switched on their fee structure.
And when oil is priced in btc? Ignore You (2009-2012): BTC is a niche experiment. Cypherpunks mine it; media/Twitter barely notices. Price: <$1 to $10. No threat. Laugh at You/Ridicule (2013-2017): "Magic internet money," Ponzi scam jokes from CNBC, economists (e.g., Krugman: "Bitcoin is evil"). Bubbles pop (Mt. Gox), but awareness grows. Price: $1k peaks, crashes. Retail FOMO starts. Fight You/Attack (2018-2025+): Heavy resistance—regulators ban exchanges (China), SEC lawsuits (Ripple, Coinbase), FUD campaigns ("rat poison squared" - Warren Buffett), inflation smears, energy FUD, CBDC pushes as competition. 2022 FTX collapse weaponized. Yet halvings, Lightning, ETFs force grudging respect. Price: $69k ATH (2021), bear to $16k, back to $100k+ (2025). You Win (2026+ emerging): Mass adoption. Energy priced in BTC. (Electricity / oil), BTC as reserve asset (nations like El Salvador, maybe others), corporate treasuries (MicroStrategy, Tesla hold), TradFi integration (Goldman, Fideltiy, Citi Bank) (ETFs >$100B AUM), payment rails. Governments buy dips or launch BTC ETFs. Price moons indefinitely as sound money supplants fiat. Where are we now (March 2026)? Still deep in Stage 3: Fight You, but cracking toward Stage 4. Post-2025 peak ($125k), we're seeing intensified battles—SEC delays on more ETFs/staking, EU MiCA regs squeezing privacy coins, US political theater (pro/anti-BTC bills), bank FUD on volatility amid macro chaos. But wins mount: Nation-state buying rumors, ETF inflows resuming, on-chain metrics show HODLers stacking (reserves <2.5M BTC). The "fight" is fiercer because victory's close—institutions aren't laughing anymore; they're competing. Full "win" hits when fiat debasement accelerates. Resistance = fuel; expect more noise before silence.
Thanks for your reply! I'm just starting investing/saving in general, most of my available cash goes into BTC/ETH (aiming for 85/15), some cash saving and stuff but mostly cryptos, so I'm not quite there yet but I'm thinking 2-4 years of constant DCA to get where I can borrow against my crypto wallet
Ok, perhaps valid comment. But how does that differ from BTC and Saylor desperate mobilization via his buys on weekly/bi-weekly basis? I think the time has come to discuss projects based on their technical value towards real use cases, so primitive speculative and base-less competition and hype making is dying … at least I am hoping 🤔
Yup I have it in my Roth. Buying only when BTC has big drops
If you bought BTC when Gold was around 1.5k, how much would BTC need to be to outperform Gold?
I have money that's in Roth IRAs anyway so holding BTC in tax free accounts is a no brainer.
Same. A good chunk in self custody, and then a solid amount of my IRAs as BTC ETFs.
I think it's worth knowing how well it's work, how to operate them safely, how the blockchain works, the information side of it. However, from an investment perspective today. If you self-custody you're making your life a lot harder when it comes to taxes. If you use ibit your broker tracks all your tax information. Super simple. If you use coinbase and stay on coinbase. They have your entries and your exits. If you self custody you have to track your purchase and the date, then when you sell you track your sale and the date. You're likely to get incorrect tax information from the exchange, plenty of us did. So, this is the drawback of self custody now that exchanges are sending out 1099 DA's. If you're outside the United States, this doesn't apply to you. In some countries self-custody I'm sure makes a lot more sense. Many of you guys in here are what I would call BTC collectors. The plan is to just buy a little bit more and there isn't really an exit strategy right now. If you're in the USA your life is exponentially easier to do that using ibit or fbtc. You don't have any trade fees and all of your entries are tracked. When you do go to sell it, it's very straightforward, no tax headaches. With self custody you have to secure your seed, track all of your purchases, the month, the dollar amount, if you don't mind doing the extra steps it definitely works. It's just more of a hassle
Post is by: BendNo2750 and the url/text [ ](https://goo.gl/GP6ppk)is: https://youtube.com/shorts/B5b4CQ08Yww?si=srOd4mh9FPirU2TZ Bitcoin just crossed another scarcity milestone. More than 20 million BTC are already in circulation, which means roughly 95% of the total 21 million supply has already been mined. What’s left now is the final stretch: about 1 million BTC still to be mined, released slower and slower over time as halvings keep cutting new supply.  That’s what makes this moment stand out. We are no longer talking about early supply expansion. We are talking about the last few percent. *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/CryptoMarkets) if you have any questions or concerns.*
Self custody every time. Just be a responsible smart individual. Don't let others custody your BTC. If they custody your BTC it isn't yours. Its really simple, don't over complicate it.
A lot of it is ETF-related. Authorized participants rebalance around market open, and the creation/redemption mechanism forces spot BTC transactions that show up as exchange inflows. You can actually see it in intraday exchange flow data: deposit spikes cluster in the 30 min window before US open. Options dealers hedging delta adds to it, but the ETF plumbing is the structural driver that didn't exist before 2024.
I jumped into the dip and bought BTC with 75% of my total budget, at 69k. The rest (25%) is being DCA-ed weekly, scaling until end of this year. Of course I will buy more if it goes to 60k or 50k. Do you think this is a good plan?
I don't like my LTV getting over 50% and it climbed that high within a few weeks of taking the loan. I've been around since 2013 so I know how some of the swings can go in crypto and I get a bit paranoid. But basically, my current liquidation prices for ETH are around $850 and for BTC around $28k. I'm fairly confident those prices won't be touched ever again but my biggest fear is that crypto has never seen a true recession so things could get ugly if we walk into one. If bitcoin goes on a stable uptrend, I wouldn't mind if my LTV gets a little higher but in the current state of things, I wouldn't be shocked if crypto goes down further which is why I'm keeping my LTV sub 40%.
Just curious, what LTV do you normally use? I'm nowhere near having enough BTC to loan against, but when I get there, I'd like to know what LTV more experienced people tend to prefer.
Ahh man, not BTC or Eth?? /s
Very similar situation with me. I started buying at 49k back in 2022 when the market was going down. I was excited to buy more and DCA all the way down to 18k. My only issue was not buying enough at those times and worst of all, got caught up in the altcoin craze. While some of my altcoin bags went up, I never sold. If I just DCA into BTC with all the money I put into altcoins I would be sitting pretty right now. This time in the market reminds me of that time as well. I started DCA weekly back into BTC a month ago and just going to do that for the next few months while prices are low. And I’m doubling down! No altcoins for the foreseeable future and sticking with BTC. When the market reverses, I plan to cash out my altcoin bags at my average price (some lose money) and flip into BTC. All a learning process but I’ve seen a full cycle now and know what to expect moving forward.
The scary part is if BTC drops hard and fast, the lender can sell your BTC automatically to cover the loan. You don't get a warning. It just happens. And crypto can drop 30-40% in a matter of weeks, that's just normal volatility for this asset class. The other thing to watch is if you use that borrowed cash to buy more crypto or stocks, and the market tanks across the board, everything goes down at once. Your collateral loses value AND your new positions are in the red. That's a rough spot to be in.
The 20M BTC milestone is interesting historically, but from a market perspective it’s mostly symbolic. Bitcoin’s issuance schedule has been known for years, so the market already prices that in. It’s not the kind of event that usually drives price by itself. The FOMC meeting matters much more. Bitcoin is still very sensitive to global liquidity. If the Fed signals tighter policy or keeps rates higher for longer, risk assets tend to cool off. If the tone shifts toward easing or future liquidity, crypto usually reacts quickly because it’s one of the most liquidity-sensitive markets. So the real question isn’t the 20M coin milestone - it’s how the macro environment evolves after the Fed decision. For someone new, trying to front-run these events can be tricky. Many experienced traders wait to see how the market reacts after the announcement rather than positioning heavily before it. If you want to understand these moves better, it helps to follow regular market breakdowns. For example, the WebSnack crypto newsletter tracks Bitcoin moves, macro liquidity and the narratives driving the market, which makes it easier to see the bigger picture during weeks like this.
Are those all different options, or a complete set of tools grouped together? Because from my first glance at strike it says they convert back fiat. Which I don't want. Sure I could just take the fiat and buy BTC again, but it's an extra step and extra fees
I'll strongly advise against this because during a long drawdown you'll end up force selling the same BTC you don't want to sell. Speaking from experience bro.
I have a fairly sizable loan against my BTC and ETH on coinbase. Process couldn't be easier. Literally had the money within minutes. I also took the loan out right before everything crashed so of course I was panicking but mt LTV is very low and I recommend not going too high on LTV for just that reason. My current rate is like 4% APR and I'm paying it down every month. Current LTV is like 34% so I don't think I'm in much danger. It was easier take the loan or pay the capital gains tax. I would recommend doing the calcs on when you plan on paying it off and what the total interest would be vs what your capital gains hit would be. I'm saving a ton of money by not taking the capital gains tax even with the interest calculated over the next couple of years.
It has a limited supply, and it has a diversified number of participants: \- Institutional \- Investment funds \- Individuals investing or protecting their savings \- Traders And more... how would you not get in at least with **your own strategy**? My reason is to grow my savings. What made me **take the decision**? Two factors: 1) Trust, after reading and hearing real-life stories about Bitcoin since 2017, I could tell that there were ups and downs, but that in the end, the market cap always grew. 2) The monetary system in my country was broken. Politicians destroyed our currency and created high inflation. I couldn't save or invest in my own currency, nor could I buy dollars or open a broker account in more "serious" countries. So I was pushed to alternative assets. Both factors combined made me buy, and I got most of my BTC at 12-19k range. It was an amazing return so far.
Pretty much everything outside BTC/ETH/BSC/SOL/HYPE and defi bluechips.
Isn’t anyone else impressed with how resilient BTC is? Usually it would have cratered with the stock market but it’s still near 70 and going strong!
When BTC is up this sub is full of "I wish BTC was cheaper so I could buy more". When it's down I see nothing but complaints.
It will be $BTC for me as well, I’ll also borrow against my $BTC on Sats Terminal when I need liquidity or to earn yield with stable coin borrowed. Maintain exposure to $BTC
Post is by: xtarsy and the url/text [ ](https://goo.gl/GP6ppk)is: /r/CryptoMarkets/comments/1rrsptj/745_smart_money_wallets_are_short_eth_and_sitting/ Hi everyone, been tracking on-chain positioning on Hyperliquid for a while (I did some data analysis on skill-rated wallets). This week's data is worth sharing. Most tracked coins have a modest bearish tilt right now, net biases of -30 to -42. ETH is completely different. 745 high elo wallets are short from around $2,243, net bias of -249, which is nearly 6x the next largest short and bigger than every other coin combined. At today's \~$2,048 the position is sitting on 8.67% unrealized profit. The position being right is also what makes it dangerous. 67% consensus means it's a crowded trade. If ETH catches a bid, $541M needs to exit through the same door at the same time. Here's why it hasn't unwound after 22 days: smart money is being paid to hold on both sides. The ETH short earns funding (paid to short), BTC longs ($768M) are paid to long, and HYPE/SOL/XRP longs are all paid to long too. When the market pays you to hold a profitable position there's no rational pressure to exit. That's structural stickiness, not conviction. The one crack is HYPE. 838 wallets short from $33.16, now at $36.94, sitting on -11.41% unrealized. It's the only losing position in an otherwise profitable book. If covering pressure builds there, worth watching whether it spreads. Last thing: the top-50 rated wallets by performance are unanimously short speculative alts (BABY, XMR, XAI) while the broader wallet population leans long on those same names. The best performers are running a harder bear playbook than the crowd. We're on Day 22 of a RISK OFF regime. These don't break on scheduled news, they break when the crowded side is forced to move. What's your read on ETH here? Is the crowded short a sign of conviction or is the exit risk being underpriced? Wrote a [full breakdown ](https://hyprswarm.com/news/eth-short-crowded-exit/)with more detail here if anyone's interested *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/CryptoMarkets) if you have any questions or concerns.*
So.... Just checking in to see how everyone's feeling now that it's the end of the world as we know it. Will BTC totally thrive, or barely survive? Are we expecting to enter a new Fed rate hike cycle? Does any of this even matter?
You’re not missing anything. The point of stablecoins is usually not “number goes up.” The point is moving and holding dollar value without touching the banking system every time. That matters more than people think for a few reasons. First, traders use them as parking spots. If you sell BTC and want to stay in crypto without going back to your bank, stablecoins are the waiting room. Second, they are useful for payments and transfers. Sending dollar-equivalent value across borders, fast, any time of day, is a very different experience from wires and local banking rails. Third, in some countries, holding local currency is the risky move, not holding digital dollars. The yield part is where people get confused. The stablecoin itself is not magically producing return. The yield comes from someone else borrowing it, from platform incentives, or from the platform taking risk with your assets. So when you see 8–10%, the right question is not “how can a stable coin do that?” but “who is paying for this, and what risk am I taking to earn it?” So yes, they do serve a real purpose. They are less about investing and more about dollars that move better.
I have used nexo many times and can recommend it, but not sure about the markets, especially stocks. What I usually do is take out a loan and buy more BTC, since I’m in it for the long term.
Honestly, there is one thing that will overshadow any fee comparison. Learn to use the 'pro.' interface and place limit trades. And that is true for EITHER coinbase or kraken. Despite the name, it is free on either platform and not a separate paid service. (Don't confuse this with a prepaid subscription service. Both platforms also offer that but probably don't make sense in your case.) Just spend a couple of hours watching how the charted price moves up and down. Change the graph to a 1 minute interval so you can see the movements. When you are ready, if you are buying, pick a price you're willing to pay slightly below the current trading price, a small quantity either in BTC or more probably your local currency, and "Order". The order will not be executed right away. Instead, your order will be placed in an "order book" and wait until the current trading price meets your order price. Then it will be executed and the trade finalized. If the price never meets your order price, the order will still be held until it does. So you may want to deleted the unfulfilled trade (anytime before it is finalized.) So soon as you get comfortable with that, the question of 'float' goes away, the trading fees drop from 1.5% (or so) to less the 0.50% (or so). I **think** the current coinbase fee for trading like that is 0.40%. I'm trading on kraken for 0.25%. That is the single biggest change you can make. Oh, and BTW; you mentioned: "before i start moving funds around." In my opinion, there is no good reason for moving coins from coinbase to kraken or vice-versa. Anything you move from an exchange should go to a cold wallet in your control. I've been through one exchange failure (there have been multiple!) and thanks to this approach I lost a few hundred dollars instead of my whole bag.
Given what happened to you with FTX, I’d keep it boring this time. If I were in your shoes, I’d separate three things very clearly: stack sats steadily, keep a real cash buffer, and stop trying to be clever with dips. A weekly DCA already solves most of the problem. The bigger mistake for someone rebuilding trust is usually overcommitting too early, then getting shaken out by volatility a few weeks later. Personally, I’d keep the 7–8k partly outside the market and scale in over time rather than fire it all at once. Not because timing is impossible in some grand philosophical sense, just because peace of mind matters. If BTC drops right after you deploy everything, it can mess with your head even if your long-term view is intact. You already have the right instinct: treat this as accumulation, not a trade. The other part is custody. After FTX, I’d make self-custody part of the plan from day one, not something to think about later. You’re early in your career, you have income, low fixed costs, and time on your side. That matters more than finding the perfect entry.
Ideally you want to keep YOUR BTC in a cold wallet YOU own. Giving money to someone to hold the BTC for you is the same as holding it on Binance. I would use a CEX to buy it and then withdraw to a cold wallet.
If you’re planning to buy and just forget about it for a while, the main thing is getting it into your own wallet after the purchase. A lot of people still use a regular exchange for the buy because it is simpler, then withdraw to something like BlueWallet and leave it there. DEX options can work, but for BTC they are not always as straightforward as people expect. Fees, liquidity, and the setup can feel a bit clunky if you just want a simple buy and hold. If your goal is long term storage, the wallet part matters more than where the buy happens.
BTC is the most recognized, but a lot of people I know stopped using it for small payments because the fees can be annoying. In my friend group people usually go with USDT on one of the cheaper networks since it sends faster and costs less. The biggest thing to watch is the network. If the seller says something like USDT on a specific chain, you have to send it on that exact one or it can get lost. Most crypto exchanges let you buy with a debit card and then withdraw to another wallet address, but the steps can feel confusing the first time. Once you do it once or twice it starts to make more sense.
A healthy level of paranoia is basically a prerequisite for BTC. That’s why the CryptoClock is built as a Watch-Only terminal. No private key access, no seed phrases, no risk of exfiltration. It doesn't want your keys; it just wants to look good on your desk ;). If you want to stay low-key when visitors are over, just switch the face. Privacy is the ultimate luxury.
Well that was dumb of you but don’t confuse them with Bitcoin. Should have been DCAing the whole time with Bitcoin and you’d prob feel differently about all of it. Don’t blame BTC bc you wanted to play on a cellphone shitcoin casino.
Buy the same amount in both at the same time and withdraw it. Compare which one got you more BTC.
I DCA $BTC but honestly, it was never meant to HODL. What it has become in relation to what the white paper suggested is a foot.
If a trade makes money, people care that’s literally the point of trading. And throwing around “NGMI” like you somehow know more than everyone else just makes you look like a prick. It’s the laziest way to avoid actually discussing the trade or the reasoning behind it. For the record, I didn’t even buy Arweave. If you’d actually engaged your brain you’d see I said I was considering it as a trade. I still think it could do a 5x, which from a trading perspective is obviously attractive. Since you seem obsessed with acting like you know my positions, here’s the reality: I’m mostly in cash right now after selling a lot of BTC at 109k that I’d been holding for a very long time, and most of my alts back in Jan ’24. I’m also still holding a large ETH position from around $45 roughly 2400% up at this point so the idea that I’m chasing random “shitcoins” is pretty funny. Maybe try discussing the trade instead of throwing out lazy labels.
Yes it’s the only “shitcoin” with actual RWA trading on chain and making new ATHs against BTC. How’s your Arweave holding up? Lol thanks for playing!
Not interested til I see BTC below $45k
If it’s just a one-time payment, the easiest path is usually buying BTC or USDT from a simple on-ramp and sending it from there. Cash App does let you buy and send Bitcoin, which is why a lot of people use it for quick payments. One thing to watch is the network you’re sending on. USDT exists on several chains and if the seller asks for something like TRON or Solana, you have to send it on that exact network or it won’t arrive. Also double check fees, BTC and Ethereum can get pricey when the network is busy.
If you’re just starting at 18, the best thing you can do is slow down a bit before putting that $1k in. Most beginners lose money because they jump into random altcoins or try trading too fast. What helped me early on was sticking mostly to BTC/ETH and spending time learning how the market actually moves. I also follow a few investors and analysts like Evan Luthra just to keep up with trends and market cycles. Treat the first year as learning rather than trying to make big profits. Crypto rewards patience way more than hype.
Both BTC and ETH ETFs had green inflows on the same session yesterday for the first time in a while. Altcoin funding rates are also normalizing meaning speculative excess has been flushed out
Losing coins in the FTX mess would put anyone off for a while, so taking a slower approach now makes sense. Quick question first, are you planning to keep your BTC on an exchange again or move it to your own wallet after buying? Your DCA plan already looks reasonable for your income, the main thing is consistency. A lot of people split that extra lump sum into chunks instead of deploying it all at once, just so one bad entry week does not mess with your head. Something like adding a bit to your weekly buys until the 7–8k is used up is pretty common. The other big lesson since 2020 is custody. If you plan to hold long term, buying on an exchange and then periodically moving it to your own wallet removes the “FTX risk” from the equation. Just keep in mind fees and network conditions when moving funds around, small frequent withdrawals can add up. The boring plan usually wins here.
Yep had over 1.5 BTC years ago. Bought at $6600 range & sold it at $10,000 range. Regret that to this day. Now I’m clawing & fighting my way just trying to get Bach to 1 whole BTC for several years now. I’ll get there eventually. But no more selling, only buying.
Check out voltage.cloud for a lightning node and BTC Pay Server instance and the BTCPay Server plugin for Shopify!
This is a question of principle Also, if the person who asked the original question, wants to contribute to the adaption of BTC, meaning using it for everyday transactions, they can't do it with an ETF Also, I don't see where there is an advantage of an ETF except that it's easier as you don't take responsibility yourself
Ummm, how dis? Bitcoin is currently at a price that it was in Oct 2024. If you got the BTC in 2025, how are you in a profit?
Wow! What was BTC then???
Fellow retail warriors, brothers and sisters who still believe in the dream of crypto freedom — listen to this nightmare, because tomorrow it could be YOUR wallet on the chopping block. I was just a simple P2P trader doing what thousands of us do every single day. I helped real people all over the world swap cash for crypto. No KYC games, no questions asked — because that’s how peer-to-peer is supposed to work. A middleman brings the client, we meet face-to-face, I hand over the cash, they send the coins. End of story. I never knew, and I could NEVER know, where those coins came from three, five, or ten hops earlier. Then one day NEAR Intents decided to play God. They froze my entire 10 BTC — every single satoshi — sitting in a non-custodial deposit address. On-chain confirmed. My NEAR account still shows zero. Weeks have turned into months. No timeline. No appeal. Just an endless “compliance review” while my life savings rot in digital jail. A blockchain expert traced the trail for me. Guess what? I was the 10th address in the chain. TEN steps removed from the original hacker wallet. I didn’t steal anything. I didn’t hack anyone. I simply accepted coins the same way every retail trader on this planet does. So tell me — why the hell are they punishing ME instead of hunting the real North Korean hackers? Why seize an innocent trader’s money while the actual criminals keep laughing and draining more wallets? Why is my cash — the real, physical cash I handed to clients — now collateral damage in their little power game? This isn’t decentralization. This isn’t “intent-based freedom.” This is the biggest, ugliest decentralized SCAM ever sold to retail. They marketed NEAR Intents as sovereign, private, unstoppable. They bragged about “Confidential Intents.” They promised us we would finally escape banks and governments. And the second a chain-analysis flag pops up, they flip the switch and STEAL your funds like any centralized exchange. They even banned me from their Telegram for the crime of asking “When do I get my money back?” Retail friends… this is the moment we all wake up. Every time you bridge, every time you swap, every time you trust one of these “decentralized” protocols — you are rolling the dice with your future
More like the ATM sent the BTC to the scammer after gullible people paid to buy said btc for a scam reason like to cover their "IRS debt". ATM just sent it where they told the atm to send it. Only "theft" was the scam to deceive them into sending their purchased coins. Funny they don't crack down on zelle transfers to scammers like that.
Did you use AI to generate this post? Fees have been very low for a year+. I'm talking rock bottom low. >are you just broadcasting a consolidation transaction at like 2-3 sat/vB and letting it sit in the mempool for a month until it clears? 1sat/vB will get you in the very next block. Heck, you can pay 0.14sat/vB right now and you'll get in the very next block. Look at the current fees: https://mempool.space/ Just withdraw your bitcoin from the exchange after you have accumulated 0.005 BTC or 0.01 BTC on the exchange. Ideally you would want to have many UTXOs of different sizes but you just don't want to have a whole bunch of very low value UTXOs. Unless of course you're just holding and you never actually perform transactions. In that case, you could just consolidate all of your UTXOs into one large value UTXO if you want. Just consolidate when fees are low like they have been.
I'm pretty sure US Regulated stablecoins must have a freeze and clawback function. Even though you can self custody them, they can still be taken back. But some like $BTC and $XRP can't.
Ok so for a one-time purchase where you just need to send crypto to someone, here's the simplest path: Yes Cash App does let you buy Bitcoin and send it. That's probably your easiest option if you already have it installed. Buy the BTC amount you need, hit send, paste the seller's BTC address, done. Fees aren't great but for a one-off purchase it's the least friction. If the seller prefers USDT though (which is a stablecoin pegged to $1 so no price swings while you're figuring things out), you'd need an exchange like Coinbase or Kraken. Buy USDT there and send it to the seller's address. Just make sure you're sending on the right network - if they say USDT-Tron send it on the Tron network, if they say USDT-Solana send on Solana. Sending on the wrong network = money gone forever. For your situation I'd go BTC via Cash App since you just need to make one payment. Don't overthink it. One heads up though - if a seller ONLY accepts crypto and won't take normal payment, just be careful it's legit. Not trying to be that guy but crypto-only sellers are sometimes sketchy because the transactions are irreversible.
The scarcity. Nothing else has its level of scarcity. 1 BTC is incredibly rare, when you think about it.
If BTC is so important to you, try running a node. Maybe then you'll understand what's what in the crypto market.
Macht es nicht mehr Sinn während des Bärenmarkts regelmäßig kleinere Beträge zu investieren statt zu hoffen mit einem Betrag den tiefsten Kurs zu erwischen. Kann sein das wir BTC noch bei 50 tsd oder sogar noch darunter sehen bis zum nächsten halving 2028 aber vielleicht bleibt es auch bei einer seitwärts Bewegung mit kleinen Schwankungen oder dips nach oben
**Why some people say “don’t sell your Bitcoin, borrow against it instead”** It comes down to trade‑offs, not a magic trick. **Borrowing lets you keep your long‑term exposure** while getting cash today. If you think BTC will be worth much more later, paying interest might feel worth it to avoid selling early. Borrowing also doesn’t trigger a taxable sale in many countries, which is another reason some people prefer it. But it’s not automatically better. **You’re taking on debt, interest, and liquidation risk** if the price drops. Selling is simpler, safer, and locks in real profit with no strings attached. So the short version is: * **Borrowing = keep your BTC + get cash, but take on risk and interest.** * **Selling = guaranteed profit, no debt, but you lose future upside.** Neither is universally “right.” It just depends on whether someone values **certainty** or **continued exposure** more. (Not financial advice — just the mechanics.)
Projects could be great by itself, but token doesn't have any utility. Important distinction here, unlike stocks, you're not investing in the project, but just the token it created. Look into the tokenomics of the tokens. I'd lean on large caps like BTC and ETH here to start.
Thanks, I just bought 10k worth of BTC.
There might be some long‑term correlation between BTC price and production cost, but this chart really oversells it. The arrows are classic cherry‑picking — they show the few touches and ignore the many misses. The smooth 2026 projection is just a curve‑fit; real production‑cost estimates swing wildly with hardware, electricity, geography, fees, and methodology. Turning a assumption‑heavy metric into a clean story about “bounce levels” is more narrative than analysis.
The highest conviction I have has to be BTC. 99% of the rest go down in the long term.
This is as dumb as saying that BTC uses less energy than the entire global financial system, so it isn't as wasteful. Scale matters. And the bank isn't going to let someone wire their life savings to Nigeria or Myanmar without asking questions. That's why they used gift cards before, but they could only get $2k at a time. Now it's unlimited with crypto. Such innovation, much future of finance.
BTC, ETH, LINK. The holy trinity.
trading 10,000 BTC for two Papa John's pizzas.
It doesn't "rely on" any of that to exist. It just so happens that thieves, frauds, and scammers will use the latest technology as part of their scams. In the early days of automobiles bank robbers made us of automobiles in such a way that it was practically a cheat code. All you had to do was have a car that could out pace and out last the cops and you dramatically increased your chances of being able to get away. Does that mean the car manufacturers should be on the hook for the money they stole using cars? Or can you separate the tool someone used from the person using it to commit a crime? Blaming BTC for the scams people use to steal it would be like blaming knife companies for stabbing incidents. It's not the object that is illegal, it's the action.
BTC backed loans are underrated for this. borrow against your stack on something like Ledn or Nexo, spend the cash, keep your BTC exposure. no taxable event, no selling. crypto cards work too but the conversion fees quietly eat into returns over time.
I guess there is potential for bitcoin to breakout Right now, Bitcoin is in a high-stakes "holding pattern." It has spent much of early March 2026 hovering around the $70,000–$72,000 mark, showing extreme resilience despite massive geopolitical tension in the Middle East and fluctuating oil prices. Is it "Coiled" for a Breakout? Many technical analysts would say yes, but with a heavy dose of caution. Here is the "coiling" setup: • The Resistance Wall: Bitcoin has faced repeated rejections at the $72,000 level. A decisive break above this (with high volume) is what many traders are waiting for to signal a run toward $80,000. • The "Short Squeeze" Potential: There is a significant amount of bearish positioning (short sellers). If Bitcoin pops above $73,400, it could trigger a "pain trade," forcing those shorts to close and catapulting the price higher. • The Floor: On-chain data shows "Smart Money" (whales) accumulated roughly 53,000 BTC during recent market dips, suggesting strong support near $64,000.
Less of a BTC homer and more of a hater of centralized currency controlled by spineless fuckwits that are sold out to large interests.
Not a great time to be buying index funds. But if you need the income, Id recommend STRC, paying 11.5% dividends at the moment. Massively over collateralized. Technically an equity and strategy has the ability to suspend dividends. But they're no where near any kind of financial stress, and we're in a bear. Next time Bitcoin rips, STRC demand is going to go through the roof. Steady non volatile 11.5% is nothing to shake your head at. That can either go into giving you a lifestyle, or invest the returns back into BTC or STRC.
Not taking 300% profit on PENGU. Stacking ETH 2022 to 2025 instead of BTC.
If BTC 60k was the bottom this will be the best bear market in history. If someone had told me in 2021 that the current ATH would turn into the lowest sentiment in 15 years in 2026 I’d be having a laugh Im having a laugh
BTC is a relic, old tech. I have s few hundreds in it too, but I spend the time looking for other ways to invest or buy assets. I get BTC has a lot of sentimental value but thats about its only value now
Buying anything but BTC and ETH.
I'm really low on my USD funds right now so yesterday as an emergency measure, I sold a small amount of my BTC. Of course, today the price went up. You're welcome. lol.
That’s a reasonable approach honestly. Keeping the core BTC position untouched and only using a small portion for yield or liquidity makes sense if the main thesis is simply holding BTC long-term. The interesting shift lately though is that some projects are trying to move away from the usual CeFi yield or wrapped BTC model entirely. For example, Babylon is experimenting with letting BTC provide economic security to other networks while remaining on the Bitcoin chain. In theory that means BTC holders could participate in securing PoS systems without actually wrapping or bridging their coins. It’s still early of course, but if that design works it could open another category of BTC productivity that isn’t just lending, CeFi yield, or collateralized borrowing. Curious if you see something like that becoming a real alternative long term, or if CeFi and collateralized liquidity will still dominate how people earn on BTC?
You should understand the cycles and try to sell most crypto when BTC is reaching it’s ATH. After that be patient and wait for moments like now.
If I were being charged interest, then yes, I would be. Thankfully there isn't interest accruing on a principal balance, so I'm okay with the underperformance for now. I've actually considered refinancing with them to pull even more out, that way I can average down. I'll probably do that in a month or two if BTC is still around this level.