Minggu, 24 Oktober 2021

5 Ways to Buy Bitcoins

Bitcoin is a cryptocurrency with a rapidly rising popularity that’s encountered some wild swings in its price along the way. It’s been a roller coaster ride, especially in the last few years, and many traders have plunged into bitcoins with some having made millions.

If you’re considering this decentralized version of digital cash, you have a few different ways to buy bitcoins. You can buy them directly or indirectly from a few traditional brokers, as well as some newer upstarts. In fact, it’s easier than ever to buy bitcoins, and you can likely do it at a lower commission than before too.

Here are five ways to buy bitcoins and some key factors that you need to watch.

What is Bitcoin?

Bitcoin is one kind of digital currency or cryptocurrency, a way to pay for things that exists only virtually. The currency debuted in 2009 and really broke into mainstream consciousness in 2017 with its rapid rise that year. Coins are created, or “mined,” when computers that organize the currency process and legitimize transactions in the currency.

Bitcoin uses a decentralized network of computers to manage everything — a distributed ledger called a blockchain that tracks transactions in the currency. It’s like a huge public record of every transaction that has taken place in the currency. And the network monitors everything, ensuring the currency’s integrity and the ownership of bitcoins.

If you’re looking to trade Bitcoin, the good news is that you now have several options. You may not even need to open a separate and specialized account to do so, since many major brokers offer a way to buy them. (Here are some of the top brokers for trading cryptocurrency.) Plus, some unexpected players – PayPal and Cash App for example – now allow U.S. residents to buy, sell and hold Bitcoin, too.

Each method below offers a different combination of cost, security and potential upside/downside.

PayPal

PayPal makes it tremendously easy to directly buy or sell bitcoins using the same app that you’ve come to trust with your online payments. You’ll pay $0.50 for trades involving less than $25, and from there PayPal uses a sliding commission scale that starts at 2.30 percent for trades over $25 and declines to 1.50 percent for trades of more than $1,000. Though there’s a spread markup, you won’t pay a fee for holding cryptocurrency in your account, and you can trade as little as $1 at a time. Ethereum, Litecoin and Bitcoin Cash are also tradable here.

Coinbase

Coinbase is a specialized exchange for cryptocurrencies that allows you to own the digital currencies directly. You’ll be able to trade dozens of the most popular cryptos, including Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin and Ethereum. For extra security, Coinbase also allows you to store your coins in a vault with time-delayed withdrawals. It charges a spread fee of 0.50 percent and then adds on a transaction fee that varies with the funding source and the size of the transaction. This fee typically adds another 1.49 percent or so to your costs but even more with a debit card.

The fee structure is confusing, to say the least, although Coinbase promises to show you what you’re paying before you actually have to make the payment.

Trading app

You can pick up a few bitcoins with no direct commission by using a trading app such as Webull or Robinhood, though you’ll end up making up for it with a spread markup.

Robinhood takes its best trick – no commissions – and applies it to cryptocurrency. You’ll be able to buy bitcoins directly, and will have access to more than a dozen other digital currencies, too, a feature that other brokers listed here don’t offer. Of course, you’ll be able to buy stocks, ETFs and options while you’re on the easy-to-use platform. Read more on Robinhood.

Webull lets you trade a few cryptos, including Bitcoin. You’ll pay a spread markup of 1 percent on each transaction, however. You can also trade stocks, ETFs and options. Read more on Webull. 

Interactive Brokers

At Interactive Brokers you’ll be able to buy futures contracts on Bitcoin, but won’t be able to own the currency directly. The broker charges $15.01 per contract, which gives you exposure to five bitcoins. Interactive Brokers also provides a whole range of other tradable securities, giving you access to securities across the world. Read more on Interactive Brokers.

Bitcoin ATM

Another option is to buy bitcoins directly through a Bitcoin ATM, though you’re likely to pay much more in commissions than you would elsewhere. You’ll be able to buy bitcoins and some ATMs will allow you to sell them, too, using cash or a debit card. But you may need a Bitcoin wallet to make the transaction. Commissions can be pricey, with some ATMs charging around 7 percent per transaction, while the fees at others may stretch into the teens.

Buying Bitcoin: Here’s what to watch for

As you’re considering how to buy Bitcoin, you’ll want to evaluate the following factors, since they should influence your choice of where to buy it or whether to ultimately avoid it altogether.

Ownership. What do you want to own exactly? You can own Bitcoin directly or a derivative such as a futures contract, which offers a return on the currency’s movement.

Upside/downside. Your potential gain is related directly to whether you own the currency directly or via futures contract. By owning Bitcoin directly, your profit increases by a dollar with every dollar increase in the currency. In contrast, with futures you can gain much more quickly without having to front as much capital. However, your downside is more limited by owning directly, while you can lose more money with futures.

Cost. Commissions can vary widely depending on how you purchase Bitcoin. Futures contracts get you a big piece of the action relatively cheaply, while some brokers may charge you several percent to buy directly. A few percent might not sound like a lot, but if you’re trading in and out of the market, it will quickly eat away at your profits.

Security. One of the biggest concerns with any investment is making sure that it’s secure. Some newer cryptocurrency players have had serious problems with security. For example, Binance, a high-profile cryptocurrency exchange was hacked for thousands of bitcoins in 2019. More traditional brokers may offer better security because they’ve been dealing with the issue for much longer.

You may also receive bitcoins as part of commercial transactions. Regardless of how you came by your coins, any transaction in the cryptocurrency is reportable to the IRS at tax time.

Posted on Oktober 24, 2021 | Categories:

Dogecoin

 What is Dogecoin?

Dogecoin is one of thousands of cryptocurrencies that have recently come into existence. But unlike many other digital currencies that were created to solve a problem, Dogecoin was created literally to poke fun at Bitcoin and the silliness of buying a digital asset that was not backed by any asset or cash flow. Now the tables have turned and Dogecoin is worth money.

Everything about the coin’s origins points to its joke-y nature:

Dogecoin was created by software engineers Jackson Palmer and Billy Markus in 2013 following the quick rise in Bitcoin prices.

The “altcoin” was designed in about two hours in 2013.

The creators based it on the Doge meme, a Shiba Inu dog who speaks in broken English.

There is no limit on how many coins can be issued.

Despite its origins as an attempt to poke fun at the crypto arena, Dogecoin has captured the fancy of the investing, or speculating, public. It’s hugely popular with traders on Robinhood, and the reported total value of all Dogecoins in existence is about $41 billion, as of August 2021.

As Doge himself might say, “Much wow.”

What does Dogecoin do?

Like other cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin, Dogecoin can act as a way to transfer money between people, either as a payment for goods or services, or simply to send cash. Users can also make transactions semi-anonymously, even if a record is available publicly on the blockchain. And they can do it without going through a traditional intermediary such as a bank.

Dogecoin operates on a decentralized network of computers that uses a distributed ledger called a blockchain. Think of the blockchain like a long running receipt of the transactions in the currency. The blockchain verifies transactions and ensures the integrity of the data.

Where do Dogecoins come from?

Like other cryptocurrencies, Dogecoin is “mined” by the decentralized network of computers that runs the currency. The networked computers perform complex mathematical calculations that effectively unlock coins or fractions of coins as a reward for processing transactions.

As of August 2021, about 131 billion Dogecoin were in existence, though new coins are created literally every minute. And unlike Bitcoin — which has a hard cap on its total issuance – Dogecoin has no cap on the number of coins that can be mined. However, annual issuance of new coins is limited to 5 billion and that issuance can proceed indefinitely.

How to buy Dogecoin

You can buy Dogecoin through many different sites, and your choice of which one to use may depend on what your purpose is:

If you’re looking to buy Dogecoin merely to speculate, then you can opt for an online brokerage such as Robinhood that allows cryptocurrency trading. Webull and eToro also allow you to trade the coin, but many other brokers do not support crypto trading at all. The broker will hold any stake you have in the coin.

If you’re looking to buy Dogecoin to speculate or to actually use it, then you can opt for an exchange such as Coinbase or Binance.

Posted on Oktober 24, 2021 | Categories:

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