brian0918 wrote:They are being paid to substantiate the bitcoin itself. With bitcoins.
Again, no money from the outside. That's the key here. The fact that the bitcoin network appreciates the calculations being performed is irrelevant to the fact that the coins are still generated FOR FREE.
The bitcoins are generated without any money from the outside.
The money from the outside must come from speculators/investors. That's the issue.
If the currency had intrinsic value of some kind there would at least be a "floor".
How is gold any different? All the gold in the ground is there for FREE, and you (the speculator) just need to spend the money on the hardware to dig it up. No money is coming in from the outside.
As for the "floor" in bitcoins - that is the fact that there can only be 21 million of them created. So there is a finite amount of them, just as with gold. That is what sets bitcoins and gold apart from paper, making the former useful as long-term stores of value, and the latter useless as a store of value.
You do realize that Gold has a ton of non monetary uses right? That's a big difference from bitcoins which can be used to buy stuff from a handful of people only.
Also fyi: I agree Gold is speculative also and should not be a primary investment unless like "Market Harmony" you are buying and selling as a business.
You are correct that the limit on the supply does provide a type of a "floor", but the value of those coins is still completely arbitrary and therefore the technical floor is still zero, although I am certain it will remain well above zero (although signicantly below $18 where it is now).
For examples of finite items that go to zero: Check out several financial companies in 2008. They had a finite number of shares that were once worth a lot and dropped to very little or even zero.
A great example is "Fannie Mae". A company backed by the government even (if that's a positive). It's per share value dropped 99% even though the number of shares didn't significantly change.