Summary
James Howells lost 8,000 Bitcoins worth over £500 million when he accidentally threw away a hard drive containing his private key.
He has been trying to retrieve the hard drive from a Newport landfill for over a decade, but the council has refused to allow him access.
Howells is now suing the council for £495 million in damages.
With headlines like this, it’s always important to keep in mind that bitcoin is such a thinly traded (and largely artificial) market that actually trying to sell 8,000 Btc for real dollars/pounds would instantly and catastrophically crash the price.
Yes and no.
The ETF changed the dynamics of BTC a little.
Now there’s an introductory price for Bitcoin once it hit the stock market, and there’s interest and reason for holders to not want it to go lower than that price. $55k thereabouts is when the ETF began.
Also, people are using Bitcoin like an index fund. They get paid, they invest. Every paycheck.
It’s an odd thing to watch. I don’t see another huge crash, but I don’t see miracles, either. BTC has no use as a fast method of payment. Store-of-value is all it has.
I agree with everything you said but 8000 bitcoin won’t move the price much. We’ve seen management firms buying hundreds of millions worth of bitcoins
Different dynamics. Buys require sellers, of which there are a fair amount (though few enough still that large purchases absolutely do shift the price significantly; we’ve seen multiple instances of Tether bringing the price up by 20% or more for the cost of billion newly minted USDT). Sells require buyers, which are in very short supply.
Got it thank you for the explanation