Comment on Has there been a significant move to cryptocurrency in Canada over the last few days?

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goldenballs@wolfballs.com ⁨2⁩ ⁨years⁩ ago

I agree with a lot of that, but I think its hard to make the case that crypto is not ideological for some when you read the twitterfeed of bitmaxers like Max Kaiser. They clearly are doing more than just speculating. I saw a recent article saying about 80% of bitcoiners wiuld HODL come what may. They seem to regard Botcoin as digital Jesus, and pray for a second coming and financial salvation.

I watched many crypto fanatics/"experts" this year glibly predicting $100,000 and $400,000, and aside from losing any credibility, frankly these fuckwits know next to mothing about economics and finance, they are simply talking up FOMO. We have to remove emotion and look at what the data is saying, and it seems clear that the charts are not saying "it's just like gold", and the charts are saying "it's just like a tech stock", so yes, speculation, and like tech stocks, no earnings - but then again it never will have any earnings! Sure gold doesn't either, but gold is a commodity, and crypto isn't. You only have to look at commodities like Lithium, Nickel, Aluminum, Copper, LNG, and also foid commitiies, lumber, and the main one to watch is still oil, and gold still has its position, and it doesn't look like changing because of gold's optimal chemical (as well as aesthetic) properties.

Despite the rise in the 10-year UST bond yield, the 20-year TLT is still pointing downwards, and we're yet to see a markéd yield curve inversion, though its shadow looms. There's been a lot of outflow from bonds, and the Fed's yanking out of that seems to be pushing yield up, but I don't see how they can raise rates beyond 1.25%, it's just going take such a bite out of everything. Some say that when rates rise and the markets shit themselves, the Fed may feel driven back into debt monetisation. The unresolved question may be the impact of the deflationary collapse of China's economy on offshore dollars, as well as drying up consumer spending everywhere. Other economies that are dependent on China, like Turkey, are turning to junk. That lower confidence in global growth could find expression in a return to a deflating bond market, as economies seek to default on the collosal debt, via currency debasement.

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