AUXMERA (@auxmera) 's Twitter Profile
AUXMERA

@auxmera

We didn’t invent gold. We redefined how it’s owned. AUXMERA is a gold-backed coin (AUXG) with a host of unique features. Parent Company: @maysidepartners

ID: 1904838886343286784

linkhttps://auxmera.com calendar_today26-03-2025 10:12:43

22 Tweet

15 Followers

21 Following

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Crypto Fergani It’s not “shorts,” Jim Cramer — it’s a lack of buyers. $BTC can print at $62,900, but when demand dries up, price falls regardless of who’s short. Markets move on liquidity, not excuses.

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Yesterday $MSTR traded around $122. Today it’s barely holding $100. With $BTC near $61,000 and falling, the leverage cuts both ways — when Bitcoin stalls, $MSTR bleeds faster.

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Michael Saylor You have zero yield. You do not realise a yield unless and until you sell Bitcoin. What you have right now is an unrealised position — and with an average buy price roughly $10,000 above the current market at $62,500 (only just up from $60,000), that position is underwater. The

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Crypto India Claims like this aren’t analysis, they’re narrative control. Michael Michael Saylor saying that Bitcoin would need to sit at $8,000 for five years to matter isn’t risk disclosure, it’s marketing. When someone, like Saylor, consistently frames every scenario as impossible or irrelevant,

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Michael Saylor Strategy The issue isn’t scepticism, it’s category error. Capital is capital; “digital” does not create a new asset class with intrinsic superiority. $BTC does not outperform “physical capital” — it is a volatile bearer asset whose price appreciation depends entirely on market adoption,

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

SwanDesk A reality check is overdue. Brian Armstrong Brian Armstrong, as CEO of @Coinbase, has every incentive to promote extreme upside narratives, but repeating a seven-figure price target does not make it plausible. In April 2025 Bitcoin briefly touched $126,198 and within the last

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Michael Saylor Strategy $MSTR isn’t “most interesting,” it’s most leveraged. Open interest follows volatility, not fundamentals. Strip out the narrative and you’re left with a company whose valuation lives and dies on BTC price, debt structure, and dilution risk — not operating performance. High open

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bitcoin.com News It is entirely typical of the fraud that is Bitcoin that, immediately after collapsing from its all-time high of $126,198 to as low as $60,074 — a 52.4% plunge — the hype machine rolls out yet another price target, conveniently far above the previous peak, while quietly ignoring

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bitcoin News 16% unrealised losses is not neutral. It represents stored instability. Whether it resolves upward or downward depends entirely on fresh demand. Without sustained inflows, it is a headwind; with renewed speculation, it is merely postponed risk. It carries downside risk, but it

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Holger Zschaepitz For a 100-year sterling bond, the meaningful risks are: • Inflation / purchasing-power erosion • UK sovereign credibility over a century • Interest-rate opportunity cost • Tax treatment changes When Alphabet Inc. issues a 100-year sterling bond, markets are not

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Phong Le Chaitanya Jain That’s not contrarian insight — it’s narrative control. When an investment needs “be grateful there are critics” as a selling point, it usually means the upside is already crowded and the risk is being socialised. Markets don’t reward belief systems; they reward price, timing,

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Spectator Index If the United States, the United Kingdom or major European economies adopted a tax on unrealised gains — whether 10%, 20% or 36% — it would fundamentally change how markets behave. The percentage is secondary. The structural shift is what matters. Unrealised gains are paper

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Chiefy Brian Maloney Price crashes happen when liquidity contracts and positioning is crowded. Not because two charts look alike. The most important line in that post is actually the last one: “Are you prepared?” That is the only part that has real value. Sensible positioning assumes volatility is

Peter Schiff (@peterschiff) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If Bitcoin breaks $50K, which looks likely, it seems highly likely it will at least test $20K. That would be an 84% drop from its ATH. I know Bitcoin has done that before, but never with so much hype, leverage, institutional ownership, and market cap at stake. Sell Bitcoin now!

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

SatoshiNagonnaWorkHereAnymoreAnyway John Tuld You’re absolutely right about one thing: the supply schedule is mathematically fixed. Twenty-one million means twenty-one million (except those 3-4 million lost coins). Scarcity is real. But scarcity alone does not create enduring value. History is full of scarce things that

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

BitcoinSapiens ⚡️ If the Chief Executive of a publicly listed company wishes to express long-term strategic confidence in an asset, that is one thing. Publishing eye-watering price targets — $1 million in 4–8 years and $20 million in 20 years — is something else entirely. When such statements

Ram ben Ze'ev (@rambenzeev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The ₿itcoin⚡️Libertarian As of today: ~19.6 million BTC have been mined, with ~1.4 million BTC remaining to be mined gradually until about 2140. However, if the lost-coin estimates are taken into consideration, the practical circulating supply that can be accessed is closer to about: ≈ 17 million BTC.