Mine fires a *** out it’s arseI have a piggy bank which smiles every time I withdraw from it![]()

Absolute nonsense. Another idiotic example of money creating money for the sake of money without actually doing anything in the world.
That said, I don't think it will go anywhere any time soon.
I'm just old and grumpy. I no longer understand what money is anymore.
I'm with you on this one.
Many years ago, as part of an economics exam I had to answer a question on 'The History of Wealth', (or some such title).
Middle Ages, the number of men you could put on a battlefield and work your lands for free.
Then
Agricultural Land and the income it brought you.
Then
Factories and Manufacturing.
Then
Property, Stocke & Shares etc
(a very brief summary)
All of these had a basis to them that was understandable for their time.
It was tangible.
But no matter how much I read and how hard I try to understand it I can see no logic to these 'Crypto Currencies'.
They seem much like what I used to sescribe as 'Laudable Prospects in the 4.30', where, of course the bookie is the usual winner
While as a casual investor, with not much money... I would not touch speculative bitcoin with a barge pole.
Having said that all monies, coins and paper money and deposits, overdrafts etc are not that different, they all are a medium of exchange and bitcoins etc may become commonplace in time.
ATM, it is all a bit 'gold rush fever' and you could be getting on the bandwagon when its about to slide down.
If you can be bothered with all the hard work researching, bonds and stocks, particularly if you band together in a club, (bigger amount of investment the cheaper) it is fun and can be reasonably profitable.
It goes back to what @polyphemus said. Only invest what you can afford to lose.I remember selling just over 1 Bitcoin years ago for about £200, think I paid around £20 originally. At least I made a profit I suppose.
I’ve dipped in and out of cryptocurrency for a few years but only small amounts. Currently have 500 dogecoins worth £20 or so. Just letting them sit there and see what happens.
Interesting now that Elon Musk is getting involved in it though.
Since this thread came on I have been bombarded with Bitcoin emails very strange and by the sound of it I have already had a couple of hundred thousand put in my bank with out me knowing, very nice.
I’ve just invested my initial investment into Reef and Cardano. Seeing a bit of profit already.Oh, getting emails like that is scary. Honestly speaking, crypto is not a scam. It is very very legit, to be honest. It's hard to learncrypto but it actually is worth it if you really devote some of your time to it. It's pretty amazing. it's like being a part of the stock market but on a different light. It's really interesting and it does hold a lot of potential. I do read some articles here and keeping myself somewhat update at learncrypto. maybe it'll give you some insight.
I'm off to Newport South Wales with my shovel
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-55658942


I bought £100 just over a week ago. By Sunday morning 1 week later it was worth £290 then Sunday night while I was asleep every currency dropped loads and by Monday morning it was back down to £160. I exchanged it for something called trueUSD while everything still seemed to be dropping as that never really changes then yesterday I bought a load of crypto.com coins and it's moved back up over £180 this morning.
Absolutely crazy how much this can change in such a short space of time. Glad I did it for the price of a big night out just to see how mental the risks can be. Going to leave it a while and see what happens with them. If it gets up to near £300 again I might withdraw my £100 so I've lost nothing but will leave it if it drops again, as I say it's only the price of a big night out and it's been worth it just to watch it all unfold and get an idea of the dangers and the excitement of watching it nearly triple in a week.
Hopefully Elon Musk won't open his gob complaining about how over valued his coins are again as that seemed to start the vast majority of them all dropping **** loads of value.
For the long haul it's advisable to speak to someone who knows what he's doing . . . . an expert, perhaps, who has being dealing with stock markets for a lot of years, rather than just suggesting a fund type, of which there could, and probably will be many underperforming as well as overperforming fundsAnd for the long haul - try mid cap growth funds. Former small caps on the way to becoming large caps. For example, (RPMGX) >10% annual return since inception - which was way back in 1992.