What is the indicator?
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What is the indicator?
Basically same as this. Still check my Merit Circle chats daily and quickly browse CT, but just patiently staking my MC/ETH LP and my unlocks should start happening when I think the market starts to pickup again in mid-late 2023. Keeping track of the macro as well, but still a long way to go there until the economy is healthier.Holding and farming. But have to admit Im not following any news closely like I was in the past. Just sitting back patiently.
Yep, definitely think a sub 1k ETH will be on offer again before end of year, maybe last chance at those levels.Sold a bunch of ETH at the 2k mark.
Bought most in the 1000-1100 region so will just hold that cash until it dumps back down to those levels again.
Binance basis oscillator. There's plenty of time to play around with different indicators and strategies during bear markets.What is the indicator?
I used Koinly and found it to be the best for staking and NFTs, used the API key and haven’t had issues. Would recommend reviewing some transactions manually as well if the number it calculates doesn’t seem quite right.Before jumping in full bore into Koinly for my taxes, does anyone have any warnings or better recommendations? I need something that will calculate staking
Is Going down the route of using an API key all safe?
Cheers mate, they look to be the best I've come across so far. Were able to get them to go back 5+ years tooI used Koinly and found it to be the best for staking and NFTs, used the API key and haven’t had issues. Would recommend reviewing some transactions manually as well if the number it calculates doesn’t seem quite right.
I thought as much. I got spooked when I read in the Koinly T&Cs something along the lines of "We recommend you have trading and withdrawal permissions turned off"Ohh Ok
API keys have 'read only' access on the tax software I use. If Koinly is the same (and presumably it is), you're safe.
That's interesting. At a guess, I'd say that's a legal disclaimer to protect Koinly in case you stuff things up or get scammed.I thought as much. I got spooked when I read in the Koinly T&Cs something along the lines of "We recommend you have trading and withdrawal permissions turned off"
Cheers mate. I gathered that would be the case. Such a pain in the ass getting all my staking reported and through tax and then some old transactions from 5 or so years ago.That's interesting. At a guess, I'd say that's a legal disclaimer to protect Koinly in case you stuff things up or get scammed.
I've been using similar software for 5 years without issue and I haven't change any permissions.
That sounds painful! Good luck mate.Cheers mate. I gathered that would be the case. Such a pain in the ass getting all my staking reported and through tax and then some old transactions from 5 or so years ago.
I wasn't aware of that. Once I get this first one out the way the rest will be easy. I've never had to worry about investments until this year.That sounds painful! Good luck mate.
The ATO has data from most exchanges which your accountant should have access to. If the two sets of numbers differ significantly, they may dispute your figures. Might be worthwhile to discuss with your accountant and see if they can pass on the ATO's numbers to compare yours against.
For Australian exchanges (e.g. Independent reserve, Coinspot), I agree they would have access. But they wouldn't have access to data from overseas exchanges, such as Binance or FTX for example.That sounds painful! Good luck mate.
The ATO has data from most exchanges which your accountant should have access to. If the two sets of numbers differ significantly, they may dispute your figures. Might be worthwhile to discuss with your accountant and see if they can pass on the ATO's numbers to compare yours against.
The ATO had accurate data from me in a year that I only used overseas exchanges. I can pretty much guarantee they get data from binance and FTX, two of the exchanges I use most.For Australian exchanges (e.g. Independent reserve, Coinspot), I agree they would have access. But they wouldn't have access to data from overseas exchanges, such as Binance or FTX for example.
The ATO had accurate data from me in a year that I only used overseas exchanges. I can pretty much guarantee they get data from binance and FTX, two of the exchanges I use most.
Yeah, I think so. I still had plenty of crypto on exchanges at the time so they couldn't have been going solely by deposits and withdrawals. I tried to be naughty and gave my accountant a profit figure a tad lower than I should have, and they came back to me with the ATO's figure which matched what I got using tax software. This was 2020-21.Interesting. So they had access to all of your trades on the exchange, and not just your deposits/withdrawals?
They've caught up with tech and knowledge. It was easy to get around them 5 or so years ago unless you made large withdrawals that required an explanation.The ATO aren't stupid..
I tried Koinly with Kraken and Binance a few years and found that the API was fine. For Kraken it worked well, but not so good for Binance. Binance has a lot of products and tokens with rewards that are most paid daily and I had well over 8,000 transactions from memory. It probably has been improved, so worth trying.Before jumping in full bore into Koinly for my taxes, does anyone have any warnings or better recommendations? I need something that will calculate staking
Is Going down the route of using an API key all safe?