Posted on 11/20/2025 10:06:35 AM PST by delta7
Last | 1:04 PM EST 86,962.00 quote price arrow down-2,228.47 (-2.50%)
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I am buying some each week. I am hoping it goes below $80,000, before it rebounds. Lots of room to make money there.
If you would have bought that $5.00 worth on Feb-09-2011, when it was $1.00, you would have over $500,000 today.
If you had bought $5.00 in 2009 when it was 1 cent, you would have over 100 million dollars.
You missed that boat.
$5.00 of bitcoin in 2009 would be over 100 million dollars today. Buffet missed the tide.
I'm patient. It'll get down to 1 cent again...
Not likely. LOL. I bought my first bitcoin for $300. Used a little over half and forgot about it. Sold what was left for around $8,000 a few years later when it went up to $25,000 before crashing back down for a while.
Tok the family to Orlando for vacation.
“Trump supporters lose $12bn as president’s cryptocurrency collapses…”
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trump-supporters-lose-12bn-president-130350527.html
He should have known better.
“He should have known better.”
Absolutely! Anyone following a guy that hides his fortune in his mother’s basement is a fool.
Hidden rare coins cache
In 2014, a day laborer sold a box of 58 rare coins to a Philadelphia thrift shop for $6,000, which he said he had found while clearing out the basement of a house in New Jersey. In 2017, when the thrift shop announced they were to auction the coins and they actually valued at $2.5 million, Armstrong came forward to declare himself the rightful owner. He claimed that he had hidden the coins in his mother’s old house to take them “off the books” in anticipation of the public offering of his firm. The thrift shop sued Armstrong, asking the court to declare the thrift shop as rightful owners while Armstrong counter-sued, also seeking ownership. In 2019, the U.S. government learned about the coins and claimed them as part of the treasure hoard Armstrong had refused to hand over in 1999, and for which he had served seven years in jail for contempt. In addition to rare coins, the treasure hoard, valued at $12.9 million, included 102 gold bars, 699 gold coins, and an ancient bust of Julius Caesar.[20][21] Armstrong was deposed. According to Receiver Alan M. Cohen, Armstrong admitted hiding the coins. Armstrong’s attorneys said in a court filing that Armstrong did not make this admission. The auction house now possesses the coins and the U.S. government filed suit to take possession.[
“He [Arkstrong] claimed that he had hidden the coins in his mother’s old house to take them “off the books” in anticipation of the public offering of his firm.”
Actually, he was hiding them from the feds. He owed restitution to the investors he scammed.
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