Donald I, emperor of the world.

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briantrumpet

Timewaster
I would assume any coins thrown in are fished out and added to the President's bank account, it might only be small stuff but I can't see him wasting any chance.

Would it work with bitcoins? Must admit I still don't understand them.
 

briantrumpet

Timewaster
I share your puzzlement, I thought bitcoin etc didn’t physically exist, they are just numbers in a computer somewhere?, I could easily be wrong 😂

Well, so is most of my money. And yours, I suspect, apart from the piles under your mattress, and in the shoebox in the bank.

 

BoldonLad

Old man on a bike. Not a member of a clique.
Location
South Tyneside
Well, so is most of my money. And yours, I suspect, apart from the piles under your mattress, and in the shoebox in the bank.



Yes, but, £5, £10... etc notes do exist, as well as coins, AFAIK, there is no such thing as a bitcoin coin or note (or any other cyber currency).

I have (or had) a nephew who "dabbled" in bitcoin, it didn't end well. One of my drinking pals has just started a small scale "dabble", alongside his (not so small) Gold "dabble". Thus far, I have not been tempted 😂
 

Ian H

Shaman
With the caveat that it's an AI answer...
The value of all physical cash (notes and coins) in circulation is roughly £91.5 billion in the UK and about $2.45 trillion in the US. Globally, physical cash is estimated to total around $5 trillion.However, physical cash makes up only a small fraction of the total "money supply" (digital bank balances, savings, and investments).The UK (M4): The broad money supply exceeds £3.5 trillion, meaning physical cash represents less than 3% of the actual money in the economy.The US (M2): The broad money supply is around $22.8 trillion, meaning physical cash is roughly 10% of the total US money in existence
 

briantrumpet

Timewaster
Donnie-no-mates

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