Don’t You Like the Falling Steem Price? Forbid Selling!

in hive-175254 •  5 years ago 

0022 Steem coin and Dices DSC02681a.jpg

In this commentary I explain

  • How “power-down” happens in the stock market.
  • Why is it important to have liquid assets which you can sell every time.
  • Why I feel that long “power-down” periods in Steem world are limiting my financial freedom.

Crypto-Quickies

Transaction times of cryptocurrencies, crypto-exchange selling can be as low as some minutes or seconds. But you have to wait for the “fiat money” often 1-3 days, especially if it is an international bank transfer.

(For newbies: On Steemit.com and other Steem applications, if you want to vote posts, you have to “power-up”, deposit and freeze your Steem. You can retire it again only in a process of 13 weeks called “power-down.” In a new proposal, you can vote to reduce the power-down period to 4 weeks. /See here./)

How to Exit Stocks?

On international stock exchanges, the “exit time” is mostly two days. If you make a transaction (T), selling stocks, you get the money in two days (T+2) on your brokerage account. But after selling, you can buy new stocks immediately. These transactions are cleared almost in real-time. (In the European Union, for example.) The same rules apply for many commodities products, ETFs, open-ended funds and foreign currencies.

It is different in some cases, for example by real-estate funds or trusts. Because selling a real estate object takes time, mostly, months or even years. So, some real estate funds apply 3-12 months of time limit for withdrawing money. (T+90, T+365.) The famous hedge funds and some closed investment companies, trusts can apply similar limits. But this sort of investment is more for institutional investors.

Voting in Companies’ World

How goes voting? Shareholders of all companies have the right to vote on general meetings. The shares must be deposited and locked by your brokerage firm or bank for approximately one week to do that. As far as I’m concerned, the stocks can’t be sold in this period, are blocked. They give you a receipt to certify you have the right to vote at the meeting. One example of the rules of an aleatory company (Telefonica):

The right to attend a General Shareholders' Meeting shall accrue to the holders of at least 300 shares, provided that such shares are registered in their name in the corresponding book-entry registry five days in advance of the date on which the General Shareholders' Meeting is to be held…

Remember the Lehman-Crash

So, something like “power up” and “power down” happens there before and after general meetings of companies, too. And causes you a lack of liquidity, but only for approximately one week. Liquidity is a valuable feature. You can quickly react to sudden price moves if your stocks are in a liquid state. How important is this? Imagine you are on the first day of a Lehman Brothers-style, huge crash and you can’t sell… (The bottom was much lower in 2008-2009 than on the first day.)

00180crypto mix DSC01370.jpg

“Being liquid”, being able to sell my assets anytime means for me some sort of financial freedom and security. The power to act if I wish to. I see no real reason to delay the selling of an asset that transfers often in 3 seconds, like Steem, for 13 long weeks. (Not even for four weeks, by the way.) It seems to me like a prohibition to sell my stocks or to access my bank account. I’m not very comfortable with that.

Reasons for selling

If I want to sell Steem, that is because:

  • I badly need money.
  • I’m very outraged with the Steem system and I want to shut the door behind me as soon as possible.
  • Or, I see some great opportunity in other crypto, stocks. I may want to “diversify my portfolio”, split my investments into several parts. (And that diversification is advisable for all.)

If somebody is forbidding me to take my money and leave, that feels like some sort of jail, trap, police barrier. Especially if you see the price declining continuously in those 13 weeks. I have bad feelings with such limitations. I prefer freedom.

Fears of Crash

Many Steemians are afraid that a shorter power-down period can push down, crash the price of Steem. It creates selling pressure. A temporal crash is possible. But the selling pressure comes not from the liquidity, the power down itself. The selling pressure comes from the lack of trust, the wish to cash out and run away, not from the power-down time. You should treat the disease, not the symptoms. End fears, mistrust, worries, anxiety, dissatisfaction. Not prohibit people to react to it.

I have various stocks I could sell any time and I would have the cash on my account in two days. But I don’t sell them for 3-5 years already because I believe in the future of the companies or commodities.

Free market in a free world

Indeed, after a change in the power down period, the price can crash. But it will be a good buying opportunity if you still trust in Steem. Better let them sell, all who haven’t faith anymore and let others buy cheap. And sometime later, a new bull market can begin.

Communists or dictators used to forbid selling if they don’t like falling prices (for example in China). Some politicians are trying to prevent stock price falls making short selling illegal and sellers guilty. But these artificial, administrative measures are mostly ineffective in the long term. Who wants to sell, will sell, only some later. You shouldn’t forbid the free market in a free world.

Interested in Your Money? Reading about Personal Finance? Visit Agelessfinance.com

More Crypto-Related Posts on Turboyield.net

(Photos: Own work)

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I agree that it is time to look at our 13 week power down rule and provide options. While I think I understand the proponents of the 13 week rule, I also understand opponents view. I think a diverse ecosystem like ours should have options and recently write a similar post to this effect. I think we need a combination of freedom for those for whom that’s their highest priority and protection for those who make this their highest priority. I don’t believe this is a zero sum game of either this or that, I believe the community can vote for options.
✍️

Posted via Steemleo

I don't see whom are these 13 weeks protecting. Steem is very volatile anyway.

I agree that there are enough opposing views that we should have a choice to choose.

In the case of steem, a lot of people acquired the token by vesting an account and then voting other accounts thereby minting their own money so in other words, they become their own bank but rather than keep the tokens, they sell the tokens in their alt accounts they have built so they can make returns on their investment.

Let's not forget that it is also an open market when someone has a successful sell, it means there is someone somewhere who just had a successful buy.

We all are trying to make returns. But we should decide when and if we want to cash out.

Shopping, shopping, shopping :)

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I would draw parallels to short sale bans in general and the last financial crisis.
Studies show that excluded stocks fared worse than unaffected stocks.
The idea seems reasonable enough but the results are counterintuitive.

Posted using Partiko Android

Yes, all short sellers are future buyers. All buyers are potential sellers.
And all people want to do their transactions at the time when they think is adequate to do. (And most of them are wrong, but that's another story.) Freely.

Forbid selling? Such a good advice @deathcross

I like how you started your post with "In this commentary I explain" section. You got my interest right away and I also knew what to expect. Excellent.

Would you mind sharing with me what do you think about possible impact of corona virus on global economy? My friend @culgin just posted interesting article on that topic: How the Wuhan coronavirus can affect the stock market?. check that out.

Yours, Piotr

I don't have any own opinion, I'm trying to read good sources. Like this:
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/5-reasons-coronavirus-fears-are-overblown-and-14-stocks-to-buy-now-2020-01-28?mod=home-page
Thank you.

Hello @deathcross

Well, I'm glad I approached this publication.
A lot of points to discuss. And very well put.
I hadn't thought about the possibility of a decrease in steem prices if people sell massively.
But as you say, everyone is free to do what they think is best with their finances.
If that happens, it should be taken advantage of and bought, at least by those of us who have confidence in the platform.
Having the investment held back in the form of steempower, I've never seen it that way. Until now.

It affects more those with high SP, of course. But it's a good point.

Thanks for sharing your point of view. I've been thinking.

Thank you for reading. It is my point of view, I'm trained on the stock market.

Interesting that. I've read some things, I'm interested in that world. But you have to make time to train well. But really, it's a great world.

I'll keep an eye out for new publications @deathcross

Hi dear @deathcross

Great post I am one of those who thinks that a period of 4 weeks can cause people to leave steemit and take out all their money, especially whales. I hope the 4-week vote wins, this is positive.
I really like the analogy you made with power down and power up in business, a valuable article.

Posted using Partiko Android

Thank you.

Steem and stocks are not the same thing and, therefore, are not comparable. The idea of power up and the lock down period is to protect the interest of everyone by stabilizing the price of Steem. So, I find your argument that the power down period should be reduced to 4 weeks (even if it will crash the price) very disturbing. Power up is not COMPULSORY. Speculators have a choice, to hold their Steem in a liquid form. I keep wondering why people want to enjoy the benefit of power up by avoiding the responsibility involved. Cheers!

the lock down period is to protect the interest of everyone by stabilizing the price of Steem

Failed. It didn't. Steem is one of the most volatile cryptos, mostly underperforming in a downtrend.
More people may buy Steem if their assets won't be frozen for months.
Easier exit, more likely entrance. Damn heavy exit => fear to enter => less onboardings.
By the magic triangle of investments, three factors to consider: Return, risk, liquidity. Thinking always over these 3 points, yes, that IS compulsory for all.