Last weekend's British Sunday Times magazine contained a well-written article by Andrew Smith about who Satoshi might be. It examined about 10 candidates, most well-known in the bitcoin community, and did not jump to any conclusion. It puts the junk Newsweek article to shame.
WE HAVE to be a subscriber of the sunday times to read Smith's article. Accordingly, I have NOT seen Smith's article.
Is Satoshi cashing out or not? Please advise




Not yet, there is a planned number that's not yet reached...
Do you really think satoshi would have imagined that bitcoin would reach $1000 when he first started?
IF he had a planned number, im pretty sure we have already reached it.
Are you telling me that it even doesn't make sense to Satoshi that bitcoins price is this high?

Depends on your view. Do you really think that satoshi thought bitcoin would go to $1000 when he started at $0?
I don't know what Satoshi thought.. I don't even know who Satoshi is, so it's very hard to speculate his motives and plans. And that makes it funny that people are calling bitcoin "sound money"... they are actually trusting their wealth in the hands of someone they know nothing about... because if those old 1mil coins will be dumped, then bitcoin is back to costing cents and won't ever recover

This is fairly high speculation; however, I bet that if one million BTC were dumped onto one or more of the exchanges, BTC price would soon recover.
We may get prices into the $100 range, but I really doubt that BTC price would go much below $100 and it would likely NOT stay there for a very long time.... Although, surely that large of a dump would surely cause a certain amount of panic if we did NOT know from where those 1 million coins were coming.. and others would likely choose to short their coins upon speculation of the price drop... and sure the domino effect of dumping would cause a large dump and then a large repurchasing the coins at a lower price. I guess my point is that 1 million coin dump would NOT be the demise of BTC.. especially since currently there are only about 12.5 million BTC and some investors may consider an opportunity to buy cheap coins as a means to attempt to take control over a larger percentage of the BTC supply.