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Government is a corporation at extreme.



Critical Infrastructure as Govt defines it

https://www.cisa.gov/critical-infrastructure-sectors


I'm not sure what point this comment is trying to make, according to CISA emergency services are a critical infrastructure sector. Therefore attacks on hospitals are attacks on critical infrastructure just like a pipeline.


  Five distinct disciplines compose the ESS, encompassing a wide range of emergency response functions and roles:
* Law Enforcement

* Fire and Rescue Services

* Emergency Medical Services

* Emergency Management

* Public Works

Emergency Medical Services ≠ Hospital


Tesla seeks entry into U.S. renewable fuel credit market - sources - May 12, 2021 9:33 AM PT

https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/exclus...


  Now it seems to be going down. When bitcoin continues to steadily go down, it is a significant concern because Tesla will have to take losses on the cars it sells and will have reduced gross margins, which will result in their stock price tanking.
Doesn't compute. If Euro/USD goes down by few basis points would one stop selling cars priced in euro?

They can always price cars based on BTC's price and liquidate it to fiat or cryptocurrency of their choice.


If Euro/USD goes down by few basis points would one stop selling cars priced in euro?

Btc swings can be +/-20% a day, so not exactly a great comparison.

Also currency hedging is a thing that many companies employ to normalize profits. I’m sure there’s a BTC equivalent for this but the volatility would make it unreliable most likely


Stable currencies may move a few basis points from day to day. BTC can move hundreds or thousands of basis points.


What I'm saying is that they can sell cars in BTC without any volatility exposure. The price going down is not the reason for them deciding against selling cars in BTC but the energy subsidies.


Which currency lost 4/5th of it's value ( 20 k to 4,5 k) till covid started over a couple of years?

That's not "a few basis points"


An absolute massive amount? Just checking my local currency (SEK) against the USD that was in 2014.

Also losing 15% against the DKK which regular people use to shop just a 25 min ride from here.

Currency fluctuations are not uncommon and can be very significant.


You're talking about a span of over multiple years. I just checked BTC and it even dropped 11,51% in 24h.


What is the maximum daily fluctuation you're comfortable with, for any currency?


In stable markets or mismanaged ones?

Currency is a representation of the market it represents. Not from memes of billionaires.

Is that so hard to understand?


Except they also had 2? Billion in Bitcoin holdings. So the float up and down had an impact?


They didn't sell their $1.5B BTC.



Clearly it ends at HN.



Listening to laser eyes talk = full of biases


Leverage is great thing!


History doesn't repeat but it surely rhymes.

Long Term Capital Management 94-98.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-Term_Capital_Management


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