Consider Buying Steem. Be an Owner, not a Renter.

in #steem7 years ago (edited)

When I look at the first few lines of my Cryptocurrency Bank Spreadsheet, I'm reminded of my very first investment in Steem over a year ago (click to view the full version):

As you can see, in USD terms, I'm down over $25,000 at the current price of Bitcoin (-7 BTC on that larger trade). It looks rather silly next to that 1,515% increase I got from BitShares (I wish I had bought more of that last year!).

I Have Zero Regrets.

I have no regrets partially because you can see my wallet and know I'm doing quite well for myself financially and have made back that $25k and then some. But more so because the real currency of Steemit isn't Steem Power, STEEM, or SBD: it's relationships.

I've thought about how much I've benefitted (both financially and relationally) by buying Steem Power and almost always powering up my blogging rewards to increase it further.

I'm realizing there are a lot of people who are not following this same pattern. They claim rewards and cash them out as quickly as they can. They pay a votebot 1 SBD to hopefully get a vote worth a little more than that (and the attention that comes along with an upvoted post). Or they rent Steem Power through delegation so they can have more influence and earn higher curation rewards.

I was reminded of this when I saw this emergency announcement by @minnowbooster. The demand for Steem Power is rising and that's a really good thing! The price of it, in USD terms, is falling. One of the reasons for this, possibly, has to do with exchanges constantly having Steem wallet issues (just use Open Ledger), but it might also be that we're filling our own demand internally instead of encouraging external investment.

Don't get me wrong, I'm a fan of @minnowbooster and have delegated some of my Steem Power to it. I like the idea of spreading my voting around to many different accounts, far more than I could vote for on my own. I just think we have some signals in the market here that many may not be noticing.

If you want more voting power, think long term. Instead of spending some SBD on a vote here and there, why not directly buy Steem and power up yourself? That way the investment stays entirely with you and lasts long term. I've been here over a year, so I can look back and see the benefits of consistent blogging and powering up. Yes, the "interest" (it's really share dilution protection) rate was higher in the past, but the fact remains that powering up your account means you reap the curation rewards and influence benefits directly from now until the future. Or, if you're not active on Steemit voting or posting much, power up and delegate to something like @minnowbooster to earn rewards that way. Currently, even just holding Steem Power gives you 6.7% of the 9% total inflation over the course of a year caused by newly created Steem (thanks to @onthewayout for an important correction here).

That's how you go from being a renter to an owner/lender.

The rich understand these concepts, and it's how they get rich. Those who are living paycheck to paycheck, unfortunately, either don't understand this or are not in a place in their life to do anything about it. Some waste money on pay day loan interest just to get by.

You may be tempted to think I've always had money, but I know (to some degree) what it's like to be in need. In high school we lost our house and lived on a boat for two years. Sometimes we were colder and hungrier than I'd ever like to be again.

When you're just getting by, using every short-term trick you can find to survive, it's completely understandable not to think as a long-term investor. But please, don't stay there. Eventually, over time, get out of debt and think like a rich person if you ever want to become a rich person. I'm working towards that goal because I don't see money as evil, but as a certificate of performance. I've paid off my house (thank you bitcoin!), and I'm planning for a future filled with travel, education, and a desire to improve the world.

I hope you'll join me.

This post was inspired by a comment I just left for @tipU. If you don't know what @tipU is, check out my last post. I've linked to a number of old posts here and though they can't be upvoted for value anymore, if you really like them, please consider leaving a tip comment there so I'll know.

Clearly, I'm not an investment professional, and I've made a lot of mistakes, so don't listen to me for investment advice. Only risk what you're willing to lose. Buying Steem, to me, is more than an investment. It's also a commitment.

I hope you have a great weekend.

Oh, before I forget, we got a nice whale witness vote recently which bumped @lukestokes.mhth up to 29th place! Very Nice! Thank you to all my supporters.


Luke Stokes is a father, husband, business owner, programmer, and voluntaryist who wants to help create a world we all want to live in. Visit UnderstandingBlockchainFreedom.com

I'm a Witness! Please vote for @lukestokes.mhth

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Nice post! Actually, I think having a mixed strategy where you buy a lot of Steem and also rent a lot of Steem is the best imho:) Steem on!

Best of both worlds right there. :)

It's so easy to get caught up in chasing the quick buck (I know I did in my younger years) with constantly trading and trying to "beat" the market. For every success story in the trading realm there are thousands of sob stories.

The wealthy think in "blocks" of time, 5 years, 10 years and so on, why the people who struggle with money think only of today. I think it was Buffett who said it's you're not willing to hold an investment for 10 years don't even think about holding it for 10 minutes. Find something you believe in and make it part of your long term portfolio, part of your life so to speak. By doing this you will constantly be learning more about the investment and eventually you'll become an expert on it, being able to make more intelligent decisions down the road.

Holding your Steem in Steem Power has a multi-faceted profit system built in for the long term holder. No matter your level of involvement, your investment will grow over time. If you don't invest more than you can afford to lose, then there's no reason to not reap those rewards. Time is our greatest ally when it comes to investing, if we can just get out of our own way and let the investment and time do their job. Great article Luke!

Great comment, thank you! I completely agree. Reminds me of another famous Buffett quote:

The stock market is a wonderfully efficient mechanism for transferring wealth from the impatient to the patient.

I think your math might be off. How much inflation did those Steem buys from July generate? Inflation used to be massive until the end of last year. Also, did you get other financial yields from owning that Steem? One of the best cases for buying Steem is that you get ongoing financial (and other) rewards from that purchase in various forms. Worth factoring those rewards into the analytical model you have.

For example, I don't think I've bought even half current Steem.

2nd point: there are people who denominate trading performance in...ETC? Why?

IMO, one should only value trading in their local FX or real world reserve currency but I understand the arguments for measuring in both BTC and Ethereum. But a volatile smaller coin seems like a poor way to contextualize performance.

Yes, that's true the inflation earlier on was much higher (and I did mention that briefly in the post). I tried to make the point that it was a good investment if you look at my wallet today, even though the price in terms of BTC is down (meaning some might argue just holding BTC would have better). I didn't go into all the details of why it was a good investment though.

There's a lot of ways to look at investments and some have the goal of increasing their local FX and some want to increase their cryptocurrency holdings (usually denominated in BTC, but also ETH as well).

No one has a crystal ball that works well enough to know the future. :)

The spreadsheet I have tracks things in terms of BTS, ETH, and BTC because depending on the market I'm trading in, all of those count as "money" to me, and if I'm going to trade one form of money for another, I like to track over time if that was a good trade or not or if I would have been better off just staying in one currency or another currency.

ETC really counts as "money" to you? That just seems bananas to me. It's worse than Ethereum (same tech, so same risk, but without the good parts and the development or community) in every way and has been proven to be just a marketing exercise as no one uses it for any actual smart contract projects (they all use Ethereum) and its price action has moved it from #3 in market cap to now #10.

The community isn't even strong to raise more than $60k for the one person who is trying there. I almost donated to him out of compassion.

https://dexaran.github.io/ICO/

It never really had a real raison d'etre and now it seems like it's out of pumps because there is just too much competition.

Sorry, I didn't even notice you said ETC not ETH. Nah, I'm not a fan of ETC. I've never owned any, and I don't see any exchange pairs with ETC.

Ah that makes way more sense! I just saw it on the side of your spread sheet and was like "hunh"

Oh wow! Haha. Yeah that's totally a typo. Thanks, will fix. I only recently added ETH pricing to my spreadsheet and clearly messed up that header.

Like this? :)

blocktrades.PNG

Yep, that's how it's done.

Sweeet :) little by little (and a lot if it goes to .$08 again!)

The rich understand these concepts, and it's how they get rich.

Great advice Luke. I bought 250 steem at $4 each when I first signed up and I have no regrets. I've multiplied that several times over by powering up nearly all my earnings. I don't think I would have done as well without some skin in the game.

That's a great point, Jason. When we have skin in the game, it changes our motivations.

Unfortunately i barely have money to pay my colleague for he's work (Gaming Stuff) but every thing i get on steem is invested in my Steem Power for the Future !

I cash out Sbd every month but I leave sp here (it's actually investment for future!) and talking about vote bots they are actually good, we minnows don't have as exposure as you or other authors and no one likes to vote on empty bowl so we use them and get roi + some extra.

Great post @lukestokes well done for making all your money back, wish I had that kind of money to invest in, but I am on path with your advice I feel like steemit is a great investment I believe in it and so far I have not powered down at all which I am very tempted to because I am desperate for a new computer as mine gets the blue screen of death, making writing posts for steemit incredibly difficult and time consuming, like my diana post took 8 hours.
But not only that I am also trying to get enough money for tickets to go steemfest as this would most likely be the easiest and closest one for me to get to, but your advice seems to point I am doing the right thing and holding my SP I am planing of spending my SBD on more SP once I have a working computer and possibly a steemfest ticket, thanks alot Luke.

mu gusto , me gustaria aprender mas como saco provecho a la pagina de steemit y estoy nuevo en esto, pero quiero seguir por mucho tiempo, buen post !!!

Buena suerte y gracias por comentar.

(google translate)

This is great info, congrats on your success!

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