Using Bitcoin Profits to Fund My Retirement

How high can it go?

Back in Sept I blogged about buying some cryptocurrencies, and posted my Ethereum purchase transaction. At that time ETH was trading at $230 US. Today the price is over $700 US. Sweet mother of mammaries! πŸ™‚ And just last month when Bitcoin was trading at $7,300 US I tweeted that the price would climb to $10,000 US, which would be a 37% increase.

Within a month Bitcoin had hit $10,000 US, lol. πŸ˜€ Unlike NASA, Bitcoin may not return back to earth once it reaches the moon. 😎 As I’ve written in the past I started to buy Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin earlier this fall and have been regularly accumulating them. My biggest winner appears to be Litecoin. For example I purchased some when it was $80 CAD. And now each Litecoin is worth over $400 CAD.

However, after the dramatic rise of the cryptocurrency market capitalization during the last 30 days I believe this asset class may be overvalued now. So I have decided to lower my financial risk by moving some money from cryptocurrencies to the stock market.

 

Why I’m Taking Some Profits

Since we are nearing the start of a new year, I want to collect some cash to fund my retirement account. When January comes I will have additional contribution room in both my RRSP and TFSA.Β  This is why I have decided to divest my cryptocurrency investment. Earlier this week I took some profits by selling roughly a third of my digital currency holdings. Doing this has freed up a few thousand dollars of capital. I can use this new cash (minus capital gains tax) to begin funding my registered investment accounts in the new year. πŸ™‚ As far as I know there is no way to hold cryptocurrencies inside an RRSP.

I’ve used this effective investment method before with my marijuana stock, Canopy Growth Corp (WEED), where I bought 300 shares at $2.55 and sold at $12.10.Β  But instead of selling all my WEED stocks I kept 200 shares and continue to hold them today. A partial sell of a position like this accomplishes 2 things:

  1. First, it reduces the risk of my initial investment. I’ve already recouped all my money back, plus a tidy gain. Thus, it is now impossible to lose money on this investment as a whole, even if the future value of the stock drops to $0.
  2. And second, if the pot stock continues to climb in price then I stand to make additional money due to my continued long exposure to it. πŸ˜‰

In other words, there are no bad outcomes here. That’s why I have used the same strategy with my cryptocurrency holdings.

Another reason why I think digital currencies might be in a bubble is because they have become too mainstream. Every news organization is talking about Bitcoin. And some people who don’t necessarily understand blockchain technology are risking almost everything they have to speculate in this space. Even regulators are raising their concerns. See the recent headline I found below on CNBC.

Yikes! Those homeowners who are mortgaging their homes to bet on Bitcoin are a lot braver than me. Maybe brave isn’t the correct term to use here. Anyway, the last reason to reduce my cryptocurrency exposure is because of regulatory uncertainty. AuthoritiesΒ don’t like Bitcoins. I guess you can say governments hate the idea of a “Proof Of Work.” πŸ˜›Β  The IRS is already going after people’s Bitcoins.Β A federal judge in San Francisco ordered the popular Bitcoin exchange, Coinbase, to provide the IRS with information on over 14,000 account holders including theirΒ name, date of birth, address, tax ID number, transaction statements and account logs. Luckily I don’t use Coinbase and I’m not in the U.S. so I don’t have to deal with that. But if the CRA decides to go after Canadians then that could become an inconvenience for me.

 

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Random Useless Fact

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Roadmap2Retire
Roadmap2Retire
12/13/2017 8:58 am

Congrats on booking some profits, Liquid. The rise in prices has been quite alarming and no wonder its catching the mainstream media’s attention. Seeing a lot of FOMO in the space and I am glad I got in before the crowd. Now the trick will be to figure out how to leave before the stampede.

cheers
R2R

Tom @ Dividends Diversify
12/14/2017 5:07 am

I like your strategy. It’s never a bad thing to take some profits and move on especially in an asset class undergoing so much speculation. Tom

Dude
Dude
12/14/2017 5:48 am

I’m as baffled by people going all-in with cryptos as I am by people who think it’s a new asset class.

Considering you’ve merely done a currency conversion, there should be no reason to fear the CRA.

Ben
Ben
12/16/2017 8:59 am
Reply to  Dude

There’s no way the CRA isn’t expecting you to declare that. You purchased it for the purpose of investment…

How they’d ever call you out on it if undeclared I have no idea.

Desidividend
Desidividend
12/14/2017 9:32 am

I got in Crypto in early jun with minimal investment,BTC,ETH and LTC.I did make some money in LTC.Check out GBTC.

J-Bone
J-Bone
12/14/2017 10:00 am

How do I buy put options on Bitcoin?

Dude
Dude
12/15/2017 5:44 pm

β€œI believe this asset class may be overvalued now.”

Can you please explain exactly how you calculated the overvaluation, or more to the point, exactly how you calculated its value in the first place.

I’m thinking either of these calculations would be almost impossible being that there is currently no way to value BTC (or any other crypto).

Some people are saying it will go to $1,000,000; if that’s the case then cryptos are desperately UNDERvalued.

But with no value system, both $0 and $1,000,000 are correct calls.

Guy
Guy
12/15/2017 8:43 pm

“Another reason why I think digital currencies might be in a bubble is because they have become too mainstream. Every news organization is talking about Bitcoin. And some people who don’t necessarily understand blockchain technology are risking almost everything they have to speculate in this space. Even regulators are raising their concerns.” How is this different than 24/7 stock market news etc? BTCs price parabola is happening exactly because it’s mainstream — supply and demand! Has nothing to do with people not understanding the tech (e.g. Tesla) or people using debt to buy price (e.g. everything all the time) or concerned regulators (laughable, they are only concerned because they have no way of getting a piece of this money pie). Almost 100% of recent crypto skyrocketing price is due fundamentally because of mainstream popularity. Blockchain works on a network effect, the more people join the network (miners), the more mainstream it becomes, the more demand for supply of bitcoins (in this case). Same principle as how facebook works — it’s only worth that much because it has such a massive network. If there were no BTC miners then its price would be $0, regardless of it’s inherent value. Are Apple/Google/Facebook/Microsoft… Read more Β»

Dude
Dude
12/18/2017 6:58 am

BTC is a company (blockchain) with a product (cryptocurrency).
There’s just no way to value it.

Dude
Dude
12/16/2017 7:27 am

Another reason why I think digital currencies might be in a bubble is because they have become too mainstream.

– By this logic and by publishing crypto posts, you are part of the problem, exacerbating the bubble.

Dude
Dude
12/18/2017 6:52 am

Is it?
Seems to me one trait I read about in The Millionaire Nextdoor was β€˜discretion’.

But ya, that was before the Age of the Internet. #publiceverything

CryptoBoy
CryptoBoy
12/16/2017 9:48 am

What does your current crypto portfolio look like?

dipu
dipu
12/16/2017 10:24 am

congrats on booking some profit. Thanks for your post back in september after reading your post I also bought a small amount of Etherum from quadrigacx just to give it a try. looking back i should have bought some lite coin aswell as it was the cheapest but well who knew this would skyrocket.
Right now i am just wondering how you can sell it and cash out. if i want to sell etherum do i need to create a wallet. i dont have wallet. can i just sell and withdraw the available cash balance via direct bank transfer /EFT . can you please let me know. Thank you

Dipu
Dipu
12/21/2017 12:59 pm

Thank you very much. I really appreciate it.

Guy
Guy
12/18/2017 7:05 am

How long did your sell transaction take to complete? Thanks

Chris
Chris
01/04/2018 11:09 am

Hello,
I’m wondering about the CRA too; they have extensive powers to compel organizations to produce records about their customers, so in theory they could get the info. With the surge in prices, the total capital gains by Canadians must be significant, and I don’t see the CRA giving up on that money that easily. For everybody who buys and sells their digital currency through an exchange (Kraken, Coinbase, etc…), they could have the exchanges identify Canadians and provide records about them, since you must provide ID to become verified.

Liquid, what is your strategy to report those capital gains to the CRA? You’ve now publicly stated you made money, so they can come knocking on your door any day now, right?!? ;-P

Chris
Chris
01/05/2018 11:21 am

That’s my plan too. And given the comfortable returns many people enjoyed, they should should be able to accept giving the taxman a small piece of that…

J K M
J K M
01/10/2018 11:32 am

Any opinion on the exchange you are using? They get pretty mixed reviews. -j