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Bitcoin

Bitcoin Blasts Past $33,000 As Optimism For BTC Spot ETF Surges (decrypt.co) 79

Bitcoin has surged past $33,000 per coin on Monday, rising nearly 11% in 24 hours. According to CoinGecko, the coin is up more than 17% in the past seven days. Decrypt reports: Bulls have flooded the space as talk about a spot Bitcoin ETF has investors hopeful that the long-awaited crypto product will soon get approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. A Monday CoinShares report showed that institutional investors are pouring money into the space; JPMorgan analysts said last week that a spot Bitcoin ETF could be approved by Christmas.

High-profile investment firms that have applied to the SEC for a spot ETF are fine tuning their applications in the hope that the regulator will give them the green light. Investors have been hungry for a spot Bitcoin ETF for the best part of a decade but Wall Street's biggest regulator experts say has denied applications for such a product, mostly citing the potential for market manipulation as one of the main reasons.

But analysts are now more optimistic than ever before: BlackRock, world's biggest fund manager, applied for a Bitcoin ETF of its own. Not long after, manager Grayscale scored a victory against the SEC when a federal judge sided with the firm over its application to convert its flagship Bitcoin fund into an ETF.

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Bitcoin Blasts Past $33,000 As Optimism For BTC Spot ETF Surges

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  • by youngone ( 975102 ) on Monday October 23, 2023 @07:48PM (#63947683)

    BlackRock, world's biggest fund manager, applied for a Bitcoin ETF of its own.

    Anybody taking bets on how long until taxpayers are bailing Blackrock out?

    • From the time they create the bubble and profit from it until they cause the crash. The frustrating thing is we know exactly how to stop this kind of thing and we have known since the 30s but we just don't do it because we get so easily distracted by moral panics.
      • The frustrating thing is we know exactly how to stop this kind of thing and we have known since the 30s but we just don't do it because we get so easily distracted by moral panics.

        They didn't have cryptocurrency in the previous 30s, and you're about 6 years, 2 months too early for the next one.

        • Crypto is just the fake "asset" they're bunding into a financial product. It could be daffodils for all it matters. The important thing is to take something everyone knows is fundamentally worthless, hype it up and pretend emperor's new cloths style it has value, trade it around and around and eventually create a huge market bubble that causes a global crash the working taxpayer has to eat because if they don't the entire economy collapses (or gets nationalized, but we're too much of a bunch of p****ies to
          • But these are special daffodils, so the formula that didn't work on fiat daffodils is going to work this time.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      They did already. They are why rent prices are so high everywhere, because they can sit on property and keep it off the market, driving prices up on everything else. To boot, they don't care if they have zero occupancy. The goal isn't rent, but speculation and by pulling properties off the market, it has caused rent to go up exponentially.

    • by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Tuesday October 24, 2023 @05:09AM (#63948405)
      Why? Blackrock is not going to invest their funds in the Bitcoin ETF, they will create, sell it, and take their cut. No different than a sports betting place - they truly don't care who wins of loses, as they make money either way.
      • by Sark666 ( 756464 )

        that's not how it works. they will initially fund the etf by purchasing the underlying asset, referred to as seeding. smaller etfs might seed $2.5m, but Blackrock has seeded prior etfs anywhere from 10-100m

        • That much they can reasonably expect to make from their commissions, unless all of Bitcoin collapses to zero shortly after they form the ETF. Calculated risk, "Assuming Bitcoin doesn't crash within x weeks, we are in the black". There are plenty of gamblers out there, and then some loaded Bitcoin supporters who should keep it afloat for a while. Their biggest risk is people will stop gambling, but that's a risk all casinos face, and yet they still operate.
    • Joce640k's comment should be a reply to yours. The house never loses. Blackrock isn't putting their own money into the Bitcoin ETF. They're just making it possible for you to put your own in, and they take a management fee. If it goes up they get lots of management fees. If it collapses they just stop collecting fees, they're not out anything.

      • Ah, but what if the greed takes hold? That never happens to financial organizations or managers, right? They're immune to greed. The greed that makes them think that they can invest their own money in the experimental asset. Of course, they have to start believing their own lie too, but financial companies have never believed their own lies before, no one ever believes their own lies.

        So that thing about sliced and diced mortgage instruments was just fake news and none of those smart financial houses wer

      • by Sark666 ( 756464 )

        they will put their money during seeding of the etf. read how etfs are launched and how the funding occurs.

    • Not a household name, so not likely.

      • BlackRock, world's biggest fund manager

        I would imagine they're big enough to provide the required levels of campaign contributions.

    • BlackRock, world's biggest fund manager, applied for a Bitcoin ETF of its own.

      Anybody taking bets on how long until taxpayers are bailing Blackrock out?

      FTA: Blackrock is creating an Exchange Traded Fund (ETF). That means it's other peoples' money, and Blackrock will be profiting from commissions and fees. Imho, it doesn't make any financial sense to have an ETF in a volatile investment, because mathematically over time if you invest in something that swings up and down, your investment will asymptotically approach zero. The only way to make a positive return from a volatile investment is to sell at the peaks and buy at the lows. But the question becomes, h

  • Remember: The house never loses.

  • Perfect opportunity to short BitCoins while they're inflated, before the next (and hopefully successful and therefore final) round of money laundering crackdowns driven by the latest Israel-Hamas dustup hits. This conflict seems to have woken up the western world to the dangers of allowing casual end-runs around all existing money laundering controls better than the age of ransomware or today's North Korean nuclear program did.

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Monday October 23, 2023 @09:23PM (#63947847)
    Wow. An asset class that has no link to physical goods like a commodity, no country with a strong military to enforce it’s value like the USD, and the underlying price is effectively controlled by a dozen unknown players sitting on vast quantities of the asset who can crash the price at any time.

    And then several big financial firms want to build ANOTHER layer of abstraction/leverage by standing up bitcoin ETFs that are gonna a) make it easier for idiots err I mean retail investors to blow their money on it and b) make it easier to leverage against an already obscenely unstable asset?

    What could possibly go wrong?

    That this is even being CONSIDERED for approval by our regulators is an indication that they are ENTIRELY toothless.

    And the financial houses that are floating this sh&t? They should know better and leave this to the crypto bros. I understand that the individual traders can only see the $$$ and their quarterly bonus. But the execs are supposed to be slightly steadier at the wheel. Absolutely none of my investment money will be housed with any outfit that is balls-deep in a bitcoin ETF. I’m not gonna put my life savings in the hands of a company that will pull that sort of shady crap. I actually have a very high tolerance for portfolio fluctuations, but bitcoin ETFs are gonna be riskier than penny stocks multiplied by distressed third-world debt.

    And don’t give me the “it’s another asset class for portfolio balancing” arguments. With the fundamental underlying problems cryptocoins face, your portfolio diversification needs would be better served by an ETF with a value defined by a random number generator.

    Every single layer of this entire process should know better. Have they been asleep for the past 18 months? It’s literally raining cryptobro corpses.

    Flat-out irresponsible, from end-to-end.
    • All true, all shouted repeatedly... and all irrelevant.

      Bitcoin, for me, is the most mystifying construct in the tech world.

    • FTX is dead. SBF is going to jail. Binance has issues. So of course the professional thieves are stepping in to show the amateurs how itâ(TM)s done

    • Hey, now. Its only still down more than 50% from its peak less than two years ago - so a great store of value, amirite?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The plan for all cryptocurrencies isn't what they want to make you think it is. It's more sinister than the egalitarian image the crypto boys portray for it.

    After the 2008 financial meltdown, cryptocurrencies were born out of it, declared to be the means by which people could be freed from banks/governments, and promised to avoid any such future meltdowns from happening ever again.

    But the crypto boys watched closely the result of that meltdown, and formulated their plan: create a new form of currency, and f

  • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Monday October 23, 2023 @09:40PM (#63947881) Homepage

    When I first discovered Bitcoin, it was at an all-time high. Everyone said I was daft to invest in Bitcoin, but I invested all the same, just to show them. It went down in value. So I invested some more. That went down in value too. So invested a third time. That got stolen by hackers, my bank account was drained and the exchange went out of business. But the fourth one went up in value. And that's what you're going to get, Lad, the strongest Bitcoin in all of England.

  • by ctilsie242 ( 4841247 ) on Monday October 23, 2023 @09:58PM (#63947923)

    I'm reminded of 2008, where a ton of bankers got a ton of hefty bonuses, while all the toxic debt was tossed onto the backs of taxpayers. This time, instead of real estate debt, it will be cryptocurrency. Unlike real estate which has an intrinsic value, "owning" a bunch of signed numbers doesn't mean much.

    Nothing like another shell game.

  • More like suckers getting desperate again.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I'm not worried. It likely will be at $100,000 by December. Nothing is stopping it from doing so.

      • If you think it's worth $100k, why wait until December? Why don't you offer to buy some of it at that price now?
        • If you think a house will be worth 50% more in 10 years, why buy it at current price, why dont you just offer 50% more right now?

  • OK, can we please stop calling these digital assets "currencies." An 11% change in value in 24 hours is like a central bank being bipolar, where it's going through massive bubbles & runaway inflation on a daily basis. In fact, that's less stable than bipolar disorder. It's completely useless for doing every day business & retail transactions. Digital assets are NOT currencies in any useful sense of the word.
  • Who is paying Mike to say this?

  • All crypto is little more than a decentralized Ponzi scheme.

    Sometimes it turns out to have actual value and utility, but most of the time it's just a bullshit ride for the gullible.

    But here's the thing- crypto is no good as money. It's nearly useless for actual, day-to-day transactions.

    Why? Well, if you thought your ShitCoin was going to go up radically in value, why would you ever spend it? You wouldn't. People are using crypto as an investment, not as something to spend.

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