Belz...
Fiend God
Just for the record, that's 58$.
So your comments appear to be sort-of-related to the luxury status quo as has existed in the US in the past. Basically, that's over.

In what sense? A dollar seems to be about as stable now as it has ever been. That is, it is expected to lose a couple percentage points of purchasing power over the course of a year. This is below the historical average in fact. A lot better than the 70s, for example. A report just released in the last couple hours actually shows prices fell in March compared to February. Compared to a year ago prices were up 1.5%. The historical average is over 3%.
Wild swings in value of bitcoin should not prevent it's commercial use for transactions. THe buyer and seller simply check the price at the instant of closing and agreeing on a transaction, then agree or disagree. THen they have a method of sending money internationally with practically zero fees - say for ebay transactions. This is a big dal to numerous sellers who currently have transaction costs at about the level of their net profits.
That's the case with a lot of physical store merchants, also, who have high costs for mc/visa processing.
From the merchant point of view, he can receive funds instantly with no fees. Gee, that beats out MC/Visa and all it's hassle.
This is a more practical point of view than something like "finding equilibrium in a world with 30T USD."
As for your comment about "recognized as a digital store of value", that seems to be more about the process of education and exposure to the subject of bitcoin. This is because obviously, if someone receives bitcoin, they receive the value that comes with it.
It's certainly possible to conceive of a bitcoin or bitcoin like instrument being used in the instant, by both buyer and seller, to execute a transaction at great distance and at almost no cost. This is quite different than considering it "a store of value".
Gold might have a history of being considered valuable but I'm afraid that precious metals have no more "intrinsic value" than bitcoins - or fiat money for that matter.I think money, at least my money, must represent a store of not only value, but intrinsic value. This is why I choose precious metals, which have their own set of features and drawbacks, over bitcoin.
Is the rate of doubling the right model for this? In any case, what would happen to the growth of the blockchain if it had as many transactions as Visa? Presumably if it were to become a serious international currency, it's got to ramp up to a serious number of transactions. I found a link:
http://corporate.visa.com/newsroom/press-releases/press604.jsp
From 2006 saying Visa peaked at 179 million transactions per day.
This site:
http://blockchain.info/charts/n-transactions
has bitcoin peaking at 70,000 transactions per day. That's ~0.04% of Visa.
Slightly different topic but associated:
Do we have any reliable statistics on the number of merchants who accept them in transactions? Is there a growth component?
Credit card transaction fees are 3% or less. If you are only making 3% on eBay sales then you're doing it wrong! And with PayPal you don't have the 'hassle' of dealing direct with multiple credit card companies.
Will bitcoin never die?
Does that scale to bitcoin being widely accepted? The back of a fag packet maths so far makes it look as though if bitcoin did ever make it into the big time it would either have to change this, or fall over and die.With Bitcoin, all transactions have to be verified by peers and then recorded in the blockchain.
It looks like our views are starting to converge.Not as long as speculators can make money off it, guaranteed. Which means "for the foreseeable future" because I don't see any way for it to lose its inherent volatility.
Great, how much are you going to make by shorting them?Then, I found many businesses listed that no longer seem to accept BTC, or do not have any facility or address to do so on their site, which leads me to believe that they have never actually taken any coins.
In short, there is very little evidence of bitcoins being used for anything other than speculation.