Unfortunately, fairness and bankruptcy, in both Tokyo and Texas, do not always mix. Once assets are liquidated, splitting up the insufficient funds is a complex process filled with legalities. It gets even more complicated when you have two cases filed in two distant countries that converse in two different languages. Now complicate matters even more due to criminal fraud of massive proportion. Okay, now add dozens of soon-to-come lawsuits all over the globe by angry, spiteful Mt. Gox. customers. Mt. Gox owes a fortune to regular creditors and God knows what to their former employees who all stand in front of any customers in BK Court. Customers will be lucky to get pennies on the dollar and "The Associated Press" says they will likely get nothing. I noted, earlier in this thread, that someone said that the Mt. Gox uncertainty is already factored into the price. That is ridiculously wrong. You can factor in certainties but not wild completely unpredictable uncertainties. Based on the relatively small amount of money flowing through BTC and the space's paper thin infrastructure, you cannot tell me that $500 per coin is a price that reflects any possibility that idiot bankruptcy liquidators, coordinating between Tokyo and Texas, might auction off 200k plus coins for 20 cents on the dollar. While these Courts may take a long time to sort things out, they sell assets as fast as they can to as few people or entities as possible in order to preserve self-payment. Even at steeply discounted prices, we are talking about many many millions of dollars that no one in this community has or would be willing to part with for such a risky proposition. No one here can deny that, if 200k plus coins go on an auction block in Tokyo and or Dallas, prices will not plummet. I can only imagine that I'm going to get blasted for this post. Go ahead but when you blast away, tell me why I'm wrong about this! (I hope I am!) This is simply law and economics at work. Mt. Gox's last breath is going to bring BTC to its knees.