@jirskyr said in [A Year Monitoring Crypto during COVID](/post/1350474) said:
My issue is not whether or not the relative value yo-yos (because I don't invest in crypto anyway) but the question always remains - can you actually exercise your crypto whenever you please?
So if you see a 500% gain on speculative value, can you take that bitcoin and buy a house or a car or simply turn it into old fiat currency? Because I am of the understanding it's not that simple to covert your "gains", in which case it becomes a question of exactly what kind of "profit" you have made.
For example, it's all fine and dandy for the bank to value your house at $X, but another thing entirely to find buyers who agree and will stump up the cash.
My concern is also, if you are more and more exposed to crypto as a means of investment, it is extremely high risk of external influence, as already noted. Some punk can make a twitter comment and half your projected investment value in 1 day. Sure the stock market can do similar things, but at least with stocks you can diversify very broadly and you have some very long-term dependably performing stocks, which themselves are informed by the success of the relative business. And fundamentally, businesses exist to be successful and make profit, so there is an inherent drive within business to succeed, upon which investors can judge whether the expertise/capability/market exists for that success.
For crypto, there are really only a handful of legitimate large players, they absolutely do not have long-term dependable performance and there is no inherent drive for success, except for the hoarding and hyping of existing owners. Crypto doesn't actually exist in any physical capacity, there's no tangible group or person or performance metric driving the crypto values. It's only speculation and FOMO that drives the prices.
So if you have spare 000s you can afford to lose, go for it, but you might as well gamble that money all over the place; hedge your bets.
As far as I am aware you can't draw your cryptos down in Australia. I use Coinbase as my wallet and whilst I can buy crypto through them they don't have withdrawal services yet. However, this link, which I have posted previously in a crypto thread, is an Aussie firm that allows you to pay your bills through Bpay or Credit cards and even bank transfers. https://www.livingroomofsatoshi.com/ So I have been watching Foxtel for free since November, paid my gas and electricity bills and my monthly mobile ph account cos I never counted it as real money. Crypto is simply a gamble - only get into it if you can afford to lose some initial outlay. The surge in November mirrored the same growth 2 years ago. Come April 2019 it began to taper off. Is growth sustainable? Boom & Bust is real. A bit like the TIgers Finals drought.