When I see a Berkshire Hathaway Class A share, I will buy one. Only $718,000.when i see a bitcoin...i will buy one
Yeah, we're building a shop and I closed out my crypto on 11/6. Then had to watch bitcoin go up another 30%... left about $6k on the table.
I wish I would have invested in them as a very young working man.When I see a Berkshire Hathaway Class A share, I will buy one. Only $718,000.
After exiting a trade, one is never to look back at it EVER. Ask me how I know.Yeah, we're building a shop and I closed out my crypto on 11/6. Then had to watch bitcoin go up another 30%... left about $6k on the table.
I’ve followed that story in the news, it must be incredibly painful for the guy. A tech guy I know from El Paso got into Bitcoin VERY early and lost his paper code. It would be worth around $7 million dollars today. He scribbled the code on a scrap piece of paper and didn’t give it much thought, in those early days no one had any idea what it would become, it was during the Bitcoin pizza days. I don’t know why he hasn’t tried the hypnosis route. I’m a believer in self-cutody of crypto, but I still like having several baskets. I use Ledger, Trezor, Exodus and other hot wallets, but also keep some on Coinbase and Robinhood. I also use the ETFs, especially for IRA. The hot wallets are in case I need to get out of Dodge quickly. Monero is for if I don’t want to leave any tracks.James Howells is someone reported on a few times in the past. Back in 2013, Howells had a significant collection of 7,500 bitcoin stored on a hard drive. That collection ended up in the trash and subsequently taken to a local landfill. For over 10 years it's sat somewhere in the midst of that pile of waste—now Howells is taking his local authority to court to get it back. Even at the time of the bitcoin's disposal it was worth a pretty penny—today it's worth around £500 million.