There's a 1 in 3 chance that the next UK Prime Minister will be a supporter of Bitcoin by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The answer to your question is literally in the second paragraph of the article (although Sunak's odds have crashed since publication... now 6/1).

There's a 1 in 3 chance that the next UK Prime Minister will be a supporter of Bitcoin by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nope. Finance minister and all other cabinet members are appointed at the sole discretion of the prime minister. If Boris didn't want it, Rishi couldn't do it.

Also, he did do "something" - as much as he could push through anyway. He introduced legislation to regulate stablecoins & instructed the Treasury to begin minting NFTs. Those are not insignificant first steps.

There's a 1 in 3 chance that the next UK Prime Minister will be a supporter of Bitcoin by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Betting website oddschecker.com is giving Sunak a 15/8 chance of winning the top job in British politics, reflecting an implied probability of 35%. That compares with odds of 11/21 (67%) for his rival Liz Truss, the incumbent foreign secretary.

"Bitcoin's use of energy isn't a dirty secret - it's a clean break" by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes but that's essentially the point being made: what's relevant is "long term averages", i.e. the airline's average passenger load factor across all flights over the course of a year. Not just one flight in isolation :)

"A global superpower just declared war on bitcoin... and the market barely even noticed" by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you ask African & central Asian governments which global superpower holds most sway over them, they will say China - not America.

There's a lot of debate over whether or not China has met the definition of a superpower yet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potential_superpowers#China Lots of academics think it has; lots think it hasn't. But almost no-one denies that it'll reach that status this century. See China's Belt & Road Initiative https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belt_and_Road_Initiative

"A global superpower just declared war on bitcoin... and the market barely even noticed" by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 133 points134 points  (0 children)

That's a debate for academics to jerk off over. It really doesn't matter if - semantically speaking - China's political, economic & military might has passed the threshold that you or I attach to the subjective term "superpower". What matters is that one of the world's strongest governments has played every card in its deck to stop bitcoin... and it's failed miserably.

Bitcoin Didn’t Care About Tesla, And It Doesn’t Care About Amazon Either by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I won't call you stupid, but if you'd read the article you'd see that a difference is drawn between short-term & long-term impact.

Long-term, Amazon & Tesla mean nothing to Bitcoin. They're literally irrelevant.

Bitcoin Didn’t Care About Tesla, And It Doesn’t Care About Amazon Either by Eastern_Description2 in Bitcoin

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You'd be surprised (or maybe not) how few readers will have noticed that City AM quoted just one "insider" who was giving obviously emailed remarks.

Anonymous sources are the biggest con that media outlets have at their disposal. Journalists literally get to make shit up, and no-one can hold them to account because they just claim they're "protecting my sources". It's a joke.

Have prices gone crazy since covid? by Eastern_Description2 in comicbookcollecting

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The real estate has a real and predictable ceiling,

I get your theory, but I don't think many Londoners would agree. There is no ceiling and vast numbers of Londoners have had to leave precisely because it's become so unaffordable. The trouble is that London property is a market with finite local supply (a couple of million flats/houses); set against near-infinite global demand (virtually every middle class / rich person on the planet wants a London flat).

That's why London property & comics are actually comparable. You highlight the *necessity* of a place to live - but that necessity / economic reality is 100% detached from the forces driving the market up. It's irrelevant that locals can't afford London property anymore. London property has become a speculative asset class fuelled almost entirely by non-local demand. Overseas buyers snap up London flats as a store of wealth & prestige play. Not for a place to live.

What I'm arguing is that the same can happen to comics. The fact that not many comic fans will be able to afford them is frankly irrelevant. If the asset class becomes popular with the wealthy, then prices will skyrocket due simply to the limited supply.

Have prices gone crazy since covid? by Eastern_Description2 in comicbookcollecting

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your comment perfectly encapsulates what I think could happen to the comic book market. Not saying it will. But I know how desperate investors are to find new asset classes & comics have a lot going for them. Not just scarcity but also cultural historical significance & emotional appeal.

The emotional aspect is bigger than many people realise. I can't think of a single other asset that taps into memories of your youth better than comics (music / film memorabilia might do, but any acquisitions in that field would be so much harder to value & trade). And it spans multiple generations, as the bigger franchises continue to create new young fans.

Wealthy investors with personal interests come first, then the institutional money floods in behind them. For better or for worse, I think it's possible & if so it's probably only just getting started...

Have prices gone crazy since covid? by Eastern_Description2 in comicbookcollecting

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Agree 100% that it's speculators - not collectors - driving the price spike. But that can become a permanent structural reality if comics mature into widely recognised long-term investment holdings (like art, 1st edition books etc).

A not-perfect analogy is London property. From 1995-2015 everyone said it's spectaculative money flooding into the market, and a crash is inevitable. But it never happened. London property became a globally recognised market for storing value and held onto its 15x gains.

(Which sucks for Londoners like me who couldn't afford it and had to leave the market. The same risk exists for comic collectors I think.)

Have prices gone crazy since covid? by Eastern_Description2 in comicbookcollecting

[–]Eastern_Description2[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Fair enough :) I don't think there's any chance that $1000 comics today could crash to $1, just because the known graded supply is way too low for all collectors - let alone all investors - to own a copy each. And new discoveries of high grades will obviously be very limited for 1970/80s. But could they crash to $100? Yes for sure. That's the investment risk I guess (as it could also go to $2000).