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    Author Topic: The Dichotomy Of a Bubble - Why Bitcoin Will Endure  (Read 17525 times)
    TraderTimm (OP)
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    July 05, 2011, 04:47:49 AM
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    Every movement upward or down, there is the same question that is reverberated in these forums and elsewhere. "Is Bitcoin a Bubble?". Rather than type a cursory sentence or two refuting the whole concept, I took it upon myself to gather the 'evidence' from prior bubbles to see if we were in fact repeating history. Many sensational claims have been made, and I believe that the emotion involved has allowed the facts to be obscured to the point that no one really has a good definition of what a bubble is.

    Allow me to provide some examples, gathered from some graphs that have been helpfully posted on the web. As a general rule, a bubble can be defined as part psychological, where people become so rapt with the promise of future gains they throw all caution to the wind; To the literal interpretation of charts, a peak of such-and-such value is what infers the later collapse of speculative frenzy.

    For instance, take a look at this chart of the South Sea Trading Company.



    Here we see the issuance of new shares or 'subscriptions' that take the speculation to new heights before crashing back to prior values.

    As a rule of thumb, a bubble can be defined as a surge in price that takes an equal amount of time to subside, sometimes shorter - but never longer than the original buildup in price.

    Looking at the chart prior, and to the latest chart at: http://bitcoincharts.com/charts/mtgoxUSD

    I can make the following assertions: If we align the rise in price from the south sea chart to the bitcoin one, I'd start comparing bitcoin from April to present day. IF... and I do mean "IF" bitcoin is a bubble, this means that the runup from April to the mid-June high of 30+ will subside to previous levels by the last day in August.

    That is -- IF it is a bubble at all, which I personally think it isn't.

    Take a look at this chart:



    Ah yes, the oft-quoted tulip-mania. When a man's servant ate what he mistook to be an onion for his supper, putting out his master to a great degree (thousands upon thousands of gilders) he barely escaped with his life. Such a meal! I hope it was worth it Smiley

    Here we see a rather exponential curve that culminates in a nasty crash, not following the symmetrical pattern we discussed before. If we were to equate this with the same starting point of April in the bitcoin chart, that would mean a nearly exponential rise for the next two years (2013), followed by a crash to the starting point of this year.

    Another example is the classic "Dot-Com" bubble. As shown by the chart here:


    Six years up, only four years down from the peak before it hit the same level. So - you must be asking yourself, "Is bitcoin a bubble?". Well, here's the answer - I don't personally think so, but let's go with the charts. If bitcoin is a bubble, then it will follow the same pattern as other bubbles, more or less. That means a minimum growth period of two years (possibly longer) to the same amount of decline after.

    In support of this theory, a few projections and examples:






    So, there you have it. I'd like this thread to be the focal point of any further 'bubble' accusations and discussion. What the hell - at least the worst case is you have two years to get your bids in and run with it. Again, personally, I don't think we will mirror this example.

    I'm interested to hear what you think.


    fortitudinem multis - catenum regit omnia
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