←back to thread

544 points josh2600 | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.417s | source
Show context
mikeiz404 ◴[] No.26714986[source]
For those wondering about volatility...

> MobileCoin also remains even more volatile than older cryptocurrencies, with constant price swings that will significantly change the balances in a user's Signal wallet over the course of days or even hours—hardly the sort of issue that Venmo users have to deal with. (Since March 27, MobileCoin's value has shot up nearly 600 percent, possibly due to rumors of the impending Signal integration or possibly the result of a "short-squeeze.")

> To try to tame that volatility problem, Marlinspike and Goldbard say they imagine adding a feature in the future that will automatically exchange users' payments in dollars or another more stable currency for MobileCoin only when they make a payment, and then exchange it back on the recipient's side—though it's not yet clear if those trades could be made without leaving a trail that might identify the user. "There's a world where maybe when you receive money, it can optionally just automatically settle into a pegged thing," Marlinspike says. "And then when you send money it converts back out."

https://www.wired.com/story/signal-mobilecoin-payments-messa...

replies(2): >>26717529 #>>26717837 #
Anon1096 ◴[] No.26717837[source]
Are there any tax implications of sending someone cryptocurrency that has appreciated? Say you owned 1 million in mobilecoin a month ago that is now 6 million, can you just send it to someone and avoid the capital gains tax? And if not, do apps like Signal have to report these earnings on transfer from mobilecoin to USD? (since signal plans to facilitate it in some way)
replies(2): >>26718505 #>>26718646 #
1. qqii ◴[] No.26718646[source]
In the UK (where the beta is being launch) every disposal (buy, sell, trade) counts towards income tax.

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/tax-on-cryptoasse...

replies(1): >>26724829 #
2. M2Ys4U ◴[] No.26724829[source]
Disposing of a crytoasset requires paying Capital Gains Tax, not Income Tax