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No way am I reading all that.
Of course not. It is likely too difficult for you. And, in any case you are not genuinely trying to engage on the topic.
What I will say is that you talk one way, but your actions don’t support it.
You write about how people who sell are dumb and you aren’t because you never trade. Meanwhile your “sustainable withdrawal tool” tells that you sell Bitcoin to survive and have been a net seller for how many years now?
I am glad that you supposedly like my sustainable withdrawal ideas. They are not contrary to anything that I am proclaiming in regards to getting to overaccumulation status prior to employing any selling techniques. Once guys have reached overaccumulation status, then they have more options in terms of how to mange their bitcoin whether it is just maintaining the stash or even entering into some form of sustainable withdrawal practices..
I don't recommend selling BTC in order to accumulate more bitcoin, even though selling can work once we have already reached overaccumulation status, which then selling could serve as a form of downside protection or just a way to live off of ones bitcoin by drawing a regular income from it..
I consider that there are two types of sustainable withdrawal. One is price-based and the other is time-based.
I suspect that it is easy to employ price-based sustainable withdrawal, so in that sense it makes sense that price-based sustainable withdrawal might be reachable before time based sustainable withdrawal.
My sustainable withdrawal thread refers to both of the sustainable withdrawal styles.
My ideas about overaccumulation status have changed since 2015, so I am surely ongoingly flexible to different interpretations in regards to what levels of bitcoin accumulation might end up constituting overaccumulation status.
I could give examples, even though you surely don't seem interested in any genuine discussion but instead seeming to want to interpret my sustainable withdrawal ideas as if they were trading bitcoin or something like that (when they are not) and/or as if those sustainable withdrawal strategies were some variation of the same thing that you are doing, which truly does not seem to be the case since you seem to be a bit of a degenerate gambler... including a bit of a know it all attitude thrown in for a bonus without any system except to proclaim that you can feel where there might be tops and/or bottoms, and of course currently latching onto the four year cycle theory to support that your trading approach is a smart one..
I own more BTC now than I did in 2018. Do you?
That is good.
I probably own around the same amount... maybe it depends on the date in 2018.. I am not sure off the top of my head, I would have to look.
By the way, once a person reaches or gets into overaccumulation status, they do not need to continue to accumulate more bitcoin. The idea of over accumulation means that more than enough bitcoin had already been accumulated, so the amounts of bitcoin that are above and beyond any kind of a bitcoin target can be sold off.
I could give some examples that would be based on income levels, yet I don't really seem to need to do so, since you are not really interested in that part, you are largely just interested in trying to play gotcha and to show how much smarter you are because you are still accumulating bitcoin. I am not sure if still accumulating bitcoin is a good place to be, but you are at where you are at.
It seems to me that when a person is still in their bitcoin accumulation stage, then surely it would make sense for that person to still be continuously trying to own more bitcoin as the years pass.
Initially, I had determined that I had reached over accumulation status in 2015, yet I did still grow in my bitcoin in 2016 and early 2017, then I had to reassess my bitcoin stash around early 2017. I was mostly just employing price based maintenance in 2017 through 2020-ish, and really I did not really figure out my time-based sustainable withdrawal until 2021 or 2022, even though I had ideas around time-based sustainable withdrawal they seem to become more solid in 2021 and 2022, especially when I gravitated more towards using the 200-WMA as my bitcoin valuation measure.
Are you wanting to compete with me or to compare yourself to me in terms of accumulation or maintenance or even liquidation?
Of course, you don't want to work with some of my earlier examples that show a person getting to overaccumulation status earlier in his bitcoin journey would help to provide more options, so you likely don't even agree on the framework for such a discussion..
Since you came to bitcoin in 2011, you could have had gotten to overaccumulation status in those first few years that you were in bitcoin, and perhaps you did end up reaching some level of overaccumulation, but then it seems to me that you tried to be smart and sell so that you could buy back cheaper in 2017, yet you had admitted to screwing up in 2017, and to even be still in your bitcoin accumulation stage.. yet your still ongoingly staying in your bitcoin accumulation phase might mean that you sold too much too early and knocked yourself out of overaccumulation (which I consider to be the most likely) or alternatively you might believe that there is no such thing as overaccumulation, and you think that you have to keep accumulating bitcoin until you die.. which seems a bit retarded if you believe that to be the case.. but hey I wouldn't put it past you..
Of course, in order to potentially account for your 2017 screw up(s), in my last post, I had given an alternative scenario in which you could have had started to get serious about your bitcoin accumulation in early 2018 (which would have been around 6.5 years after you had already been registered on the forum) and then there could have had been ways that you could have had been able to get close to over accumulation status by the end of 2020 if you had focused on bitcoin accumulation during that 3-ish years period.
Of course, mine is just an example of some form of focus on bitcoin accumulation rather than trading (or gambling), so now you are wanting to proclaim that your trading of BTC strategy would have had beaten strategies that focus on bitcoin accumulation through buying and holding?
I surely have my doubts about those kinds of claims that trading would be able to beat buying and holding of BTC, especially if we go back 8 years or longer, even though you might want to make up your facts to support how you had beaten a strict BTC accumulation through buying strategy (and hold strategy), too. And you might even want to argue shorter time periods, and sure there could be luck in shorter time periods, but if we go back 8 years or longer, then it becomes very hard to beat any strategy that focuses on bitcoin accumulating through buying (and not trading) and holding.
I will own more BTC at the end of this year than I do now. Will you?
I am not still in my BTC accumulation stage, so I probably won't own more BTC at the end of the year. I am not really sure. At this point in my BTC journey, I don't need to hold more BTC at any point in time. When a person is at over accumulation status (like I am) it does not matter how many BTC they own now as compared to the end of the year (which is also true with me) since I have enough and more than enough BTC so that I don't have to trade BTC in order to try to accomplish anything..and I can also sell BTC to the extent that I want to or need to for buying goods and/or services.
It is funny how frequently I run across forum members who don't seem to understand that even if they had accumulated a certain quantity of BTC, at some point they might not need to continue to accumulate more BTC, and the BTC that they had already accumulated will ongoingly support higher and higher levels of withdrawal rates (in dollar terms) as time passes, especially if the 200-WMA is used as the way to valuate their BTC stash (since the 200-WMA has so far continued to go up.. so the value of the stash continues to go up if it is valuated in accordance with the 200-WMA, which is currently at $57.6k.).
I proclaim that I have never been involved in trading bitcoin, even though I have employed both types of sustainable withdrawal strategies.. price based and time based, which means that when I sell any BTC, I do not sell such BTC with any intention to buy it back cheaper or that I need to buy it back cheaper, so for example with price based sustainable withdrawal if a person sells somewhere less than 10% of his holdings for every time that the price doubles, then 40% of the stash is still getting carried over and compounding upon itself as the price goes up. In my price based sustainable withdrawal, I think that I am selling somewhere around 3% of my stash size for every time the BTC price doubles... so the rate is pretty low, which means that 47% of the stash continues to roll over and compound upon itself for every time the BTC price doubles.
I post on the compounding effect and describe my own stash as going through 9 doublings since 2015 which results in compounding effects of 256x price appreciation.
I don’t ever have to sell another satoshi. Do you?
Once you reach overaccumulation status you don't need to keep accumulating bitcoin and you can sell BTC on a regular basis, either price-based and/or time-based, even though you still would have to figure out your numbers so that you don't sell too much too soon.
I have already structured my finances where i can sell BTC with either the price based or the time based sustainable withdrawal, and I don't want to change the system that I already have in place with variations of the price based sustainable withdrawal being employed since 2015, and perhaps the time-based sustainable withdrawal was not systematically employed until 2022 - even though there were some variations of my employing it prior to 2022. Sometimes I have considered if there might be more ways for me to spend more money.
I will say that I do have sources of income besides bitcoin, and my bitcoin sales have been relatively modest in recent years, even though I have a few accounts that are kind of locked into time-based sustainable withdrawal since about 2022, yet they are selling lower amounts of BTC than what they could be authorized to sell... so there is quite a bit of more room for additional sales if I were to choose to go down that road..
Since I base my time-based sustainable withdrawal valuations of the BTC on the 200-WMA (which is currently at $57,600), so my time based sustainable withdrawal system allows for full withdrawal as long as the BTC price is at least 25% higher than the 200-WMA, and then it reduces the withdrawal amounts if the BTC spot price goes lower than 25% higher than the 200-WMA.
Right now the spot price is about 55% higher than the 200-WMA.
Of course, there is a presumption of already being within overaccumulation status to employ something like time-based sustainable withdrawal, and I think that up to 10% of the 200-WMA dollar value of the holdings could be authorized and sustainable with a 7% increase in the dollar value of the withdrawal each year, yet there are guys who are concerned that such a high rate of withdrawal (including increasing the dollar amount by 7% each year) would overly deplete the funds, yet I don't think so, even though I am not opposed to the employment of lower withdrawal rates based on concerns about over depletion of the funds.
Also a person could have a higher amount of BTC. So for example
right now if a person wanted to have start an $80k per year withdrawal rate with a 7% increase each year, then the minimum amount of Bitcoin (the threshold amount) would need to be at least 13.8936 BTC, and surely it could be better to have a bit more, such as even 1 BTC more if a person wanted to withdraw the whole first year from the start rather than withdrawing on a monthly basis.
Want to be a real Bitcoin bull instead of pretending? Maybe you should start off by being a net accumulator instead of planning to live the rest of your life as a leech on the Bitcoin market.
You are delusional.
If you get to overaccumulation status with the quantity of your bitcoin holdings, then you have options that include shaving off from the overaccumulation amount, yet if you want to stay in overaccumulation status, you should never withdraw so much BTC that the withdraw amount would knock you out of overaccumulation status.
If you are still accumulating BTC, then you have not made it to such overaccumulation status, and so I never suggest that it is a good idea to sell BTC in order to accumulate more BTC. That would be a bad practice and even a form of gambling since it employs luck rather than ongoing accumulation through ongoing buying, yet once you have reached overaccumulation status then you can sell from the excess BTC that you have.
Do you need an example?
I just gave the example of having a desire to start to withdraw $80k per year requiring at least 13.8936 BTC.. Yet if a person had 18.8936 BTC, then he would have 5 BTC extra or his overaccumulation level would be 5 BTC... so he has extra 5 BTC that gives him a cushion as long as his annual withdrawal rate stays at $80k per year with the 7% increase each year. If he changes his target number then his calculations change.
Of course you don't need any example since you are not even trying to engage in any kind of a meaningful discussion regarding what might constitute accumulation stage and getting through that BTC accumulation stage, then perhaps after getting through accumulation stage then guys might spend some time in their maintenance stage, an then after their maintenance stage, they would be in liquidation phase (which includes the employment of various sustainable withdrawal practices - even though price based sustainable withdrawal could probably start to be employed during maintenance stage).
Surely the stages could overlap and maybe you are not sure which stage you are in, yet you talk about your being in accumulating bitcoin as if you are still in your BTC accumulation phase, and you might not have even made it to your maintenance stage yet. Maybe you can clarify if it is something else? Yet it could be true that you are not sure what stage you are in, and maybe you are in your maintenance stage, even though through your post you seem to be prioritizing continuing to accumulate more BTC as if that is a priority for you. You are the best person to figure out which stage you happen to be in or even if you consider the stage as overlapping.
Perhaps also you have not even figured out how many bitcoin that you need in order to get to overaccumulation status, and I won't necessarily hold that against you, even though I do hold your lecturing about trading being preferential against you.
Yet if you are still in a stage that you are still mostly trying to accumulate bitcoin, then it seems to be what you are saying that you are trying to do, then you might not be ready for maintenance stage or even for the ideas of liquidation stage.
At the same time, I had been criticizing you for bragging about supposedly working on and focusing on bitcoin accumulating when there could have been (and should have had been) a lot of ways that you could have had already reached overaccumulation status, yet you had been ongoingly bragging about the supposed ways that you were supposedly killing it in your bitcoin accumulation, even though from what you are saying it seems that you had not yet reached anything close to overaccumulation status (whether you know what that is or not might be another question.. there are some folks that believe that there is no limitation in regards to what they want.. so then they might be forcing themselves to always be in accumulation stage..
I think that my example of focusing on accumulation between 2018 to 2020 could have had been a decently good time to reach some variation of overaccumulation status, even if you had already screwed up in 2017 by selling too many bitcoin too soon as you seemed to have had mentioned previously, but maybe not realizing your mistake of selling too much BTC too soon until the BTC price had run up to $19,666 in late 2017.
Whether or not we should be arguing about these points, I do still stand by my earlier points that focusing on accumulation through buying only and holding is a better strategy for guys in their earlier years, and trading is not a good way to accumulate bitcoin, including that selling is not a good way to accumulate bitcoin.
It seems to me that the better way to accumulate bitcoin is to focus on ongoing, persistent, consistent, regular and perhaps even aggressive buying only for at least for one or two cycles and maybe even until reaching overaccumulation status.
You seem to be arguing otherwise. You seem to be arguing that it is good to accumulate bitcoin through trading and selling, and maybe you are even arguing that guys should be accumulating bitcoin for their whole life, which truly does not seem necessary, from my point of view.
To me it seems that selling with an expectation of buying back cheaper puts too much risk and luck into the accumulation of bitcoin formula.. which does not have good chances of working out for an overwhelming majority of normies.