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Is anyone setting up Eth2 validators?
It definitely ties up your money for a while, but if you have no plans to sell it seems like a no brainier. I set it up with a few buddies, we all put in 1/3 of the stake though the price of eth doubled since we set it up.By any means I am not knocking the process or stating any distrust in the Beacon Chain Its kind of expensive to stake 32 eth at the moment, eth at 1k is $32000 to be a full validator. I personally would only do it as a full validator, not sure a staking pool would give out all the rewards equally. I also had the same feelings towards mining pools, many kept the discovered coins and only shared the mining rewards.
Another problem i have is that only when the mainnet becomes shard are you allowed to withdrawl your stake.
EDIT: Also i believe you can loose eth if they suspect you of malicious actions (what if your hacked, you are responsible) , going offline (power outages, internet provider goes down, etc), and failing to validate.
Did mine with lido financeIs anyone setting up Eth2 validators?
when you stake with Lido, you get stETH. There is a liquid pool in curve now that you can swap between stETH and ETH effectively, almost 1:1. Staking stETH in curve pool gives you around 60% APY now
It’s moving up fast since 4am. Monster gain day. I love making Gs daily. Snapped at 31 2 days ago. Its 39can I get an update on the $66 in paypal? It's one daily briefing I dare not miss.
can I get an update on the $66 in paypal? It's one daily briefing I dare not miss.
Seems less fun than "aping" into the hottest new liquidity mining venture
Money is locked up for 2 years. It's not like Bitcoin mining where you need the fastest possible thing. There are penalties if you go offline so there's more of a need for UPS'/etc. The 6-10% takes into account the total cost of ownership of the hardware. We are currently running a single validator on our gear so expect to be on the lower end of that spectrum. We are working on scraping together some more ETH to start a second validator, we think we can host up to 3 on one system. As we get more up and running the hardware overhead reduces and the rate of return should increase.i understand getting interest on the money your holding, but will the cost of electricity, hardware, hardware upkeep (you want to process as fast as possible) eat up the interest? Also your money is locked up and you cant determine when to unlock it, its up to Beacon if they will allow you to shut down your validator.
what hardware are you using?The real money is made by eth going up or down. But again if you are holding it, why not make some extra money. My validator went online last night here's the earnings in about 16 hours. I think it will work out to something like 6-10% depending on how many validators we have running on our hardware.
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Money is locked up for 2 years. It's not like Bitcoin mining where you need the fastest possible thing. There are penalties if you go offline so there's more of a need for UPS'/etc. The 6-10% takes into account the total cost of ownership of the hardware. We are currently running a single validator on our gear so expect to be on the lower end of that spectrum. We are working on scraping together some more ETH to start a second validator, we think we can host up to 3 on one system. As we get more up and running the hardware overhead reduces and the rate of return should increase.
Not really...they are purely speculating (I.e., gambling) on crypto, which explains all the flogging to “hodl” (hold) and “to the moon!” Their returns depend on pump and dump.No other thread has ever made me feel so old (and stupid) as this thread. You people here speak in some strange language about things that make no sense to me!!
Money does bring out the inner monke.Not really...they are purely speculating (I.e., gambling) on crypto, which explains all the flogging to “hodl” (hold) and “to the moon!” Their returns depend on pump and dump.
Just so long as you acknowledge that, at best, you are speculating. Nothing wrong with it, I suppose, so long as you are willing to take on the risk. But I can't think of anyone that should make it a core component of their investment strategy, and I know folks with 8-, 9-, and 10-figure net worth's. Were fortunes made over tulips? Yes. Also, lost. I hope you are the former and not the latter.Money does bring out the inner monke.
That being said I appreciate the reality check of knowing that the mental edge still exists. Really couldn't have done it without you guys ❤
Just so long as you acknowledge that, at best, you are speculating. Nothing wrong with it, I suppose, so long as you are willing to take on the risk. But I can't think of anyone that should make it a core component of their investment strategy, and I know folks with 8-, 9-, and 10-figure net worth's. Were fortunes made over tulips? Yes. Also, lost. I hope you are the former and not the latter.
Sigh. It's not a matter of a stamp of approval. Please reread my statements.I really struggle to see the value in this statement when it could be simplified into "use risk management" other than to peddle that you don't buy into it holding value.
Risky shit gives better returns, more news at 5. Or maybe there exists value that is unappreciated but that is just unfathomable, dang we are back to square one with nothing added.
Very cool story on how "you know people" but im sure the Winklevoss twins would disagree with you, and it would seem their net worth peen is probably larger than yours.
As long as you acknowledge that you could, at worst, be wrong, I will also admit my worst case scenario, which would be debt free and up a few 100%s. I would have to say your concern is wasted on me.
Does saying "invest what you can afford to lose" give me your stamp of approval?
Traditional wisdom around stocks is to buy and hold companies that you believe in long term. I think HODLing is actually pretty good advice if a person believes in their crypto asset long term."HODL!"

I'm not sure how my voice "always comes across as avoid this at all costs." I specifically said I think crypto has a place as part of an asset allocation. Perhaps you are referencing my other posts on investment advice? Which I stand by: prudent and steady diversification, conservatively aggressive equity-focused allocations, primarily in low cost index ETFs. After ETFs, boring blue chip growth and dividend-paying stocks, then sexier/more speculative stocks. And now, perhaps some crypto. Again, for most people. I am also consistently against investing in physical commodities, mostly due to the illiquidity, high transaction costs, and headache/cost of storage. My past advice, if you read it, is actually somewhat aggressive--I don't really think most people have a strong need for fixed income until much closer to retirement, and even then, my allocation is aggressive in equities, assuming one has the assets to justify it. I happen to think that BTC and other crypto have a bright future, and one should consider (or should have) exposure to it, but I'm not willing to wager my whole nest egg on it. Anyone who does is gambling. I don't gamble. I make investments.@gopherblue I do agree that your voice always comes across as avoid this at all costs, its a pumped asset, etc etc. I do agree in that no one should be 100% into any investment including real estate. Trust me I have had no rental income for about a year from some of my renters(one example: i dont see renter A giving me a 30k check when i am finally allowed to evict him and 30k is assuming i was allowed to evict him today. The funny thing is NJ who is forcing me not to collect or aid in enforcement of our legal contract, is demanding their property taxes.
Also as time passes, more and more "established" investment houses and pay services are accepting bitcoin and other worthy alt coins.
I dont want to even get into the details of my crypto vs my 401k; but lets say i have been injecting cash into one for 27 yrs (say every check i earned since college) and one has a few injections in 7 yrs (not even including profits from my miners). Care to wager which one is more valuable?
Now I know this graph is skewed because BTC is at an ATH but its an interesting graph where one could say maybe a few percentile of my high risk sector in my portfolio should be here. Even if you think it will crash, money to be be made there also.
Now everyone has their own financial plan and comfort zone and should stay with what they are comfortable with. I dont push crypto stock real estate gold on anyone but i also dont tell them they should stay away from any of those either. As in poker; it is mostly a zero sum game, someone will loose someone will win .
And as my advisor tells me ..... past performance doesn't guarantee future performance. CYA
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