Those first two examples are not quite right, even thought the first guy has more BTC than the second one.. so usually the longer that you are buying BTC then the more likely you would be in higher levels of profits..
Checking From your analysis, I see a slight difference in price from the first and second. The first person who did his DCA at the beginning or early 2021 peak and late october 2021 peak, there is a slight different. Showing that time intervals of investment really matters to every investor.
Even if an investor has the same strategy, he might end up buying bitcoin at a higher price and then a lower price, so even a guy that got into bitcoin earlier could end up having a higher cost per BTC than someone who came in later, but in the longer run, he still would end up having more BTC, so the time in the market may still end up being better, even if he ended up with a bit of a higher cost per BTC than someone who came in later.
you are actually correct about that. let me take for instance if I had baught btc around late October 2021 peak at $61,410.28 as an old investor, thinking I have accumulated alot, I might be disappointed seeing that late December 2021 end price of btc has dip down to $46,387.98 per btc. surely if a new investor uses thesame amount I used to buy 1 btc, he could buy 1.25btc having more btc compeard to me. if another investor also bought btc in early part of January at the rate of $20,250.72 you would also notice that the amount I use to buy 1 btc in October 2021 would be used to buy 3Bitcoin. all this is cause by volatility that is why reserved/discretionary fund is good so as to use it to buy when the price is down as a form of dip and hold strategy while DCA is a normal weekly procedure. that is the only way to scale through this.
If the investor who invested at the late october peak 2021 baught when the first person baugh he could also have made him self alot of profit but now you can see there different clearly $17500 and $13600.
The first guy has 0.5386 BTC and the second guy has 0.4489 BTC. and sometimes we still cannot change the facts and/or the prices in which we end up accumulating BTC, and there may well be cases in which we acquire a bunch of BTC, and then the price goes down, and then we see some later entrants who are able to buy more BTC than we have for lower prices.. so yeah, we cannot necessarily avoid some of those kinds of situations, and we just need to do our best in terms of building our own stack so we feel as if we are prepared the potential of UP and also for down too.
definitely, but I depends on when you bought your coin. like those who baught btc at the rate of $100 each will never face the challenge of buying at higher price and it dips and another person bought cheaper than the first person. I think people who actually accumulated alot that never regret the ups and downs market fluctuations are those early adopters who accumulated less than $100. because even if btc surly reaches $75k and dip down to $20k, they are still at advantage. so I presume early adopters should be classified as those who bought below $100.