Worth mentioning- the U.S. dollar is also backed by nothing tangible. |
| No way |
| Late 40s with 3 million overall. Have about 70k invested that's now worth 140k. |
| Zero. I don't understand it so I'm sticking with index funds. |
| late 40s, around $8m in assets, probably $6m in investments. $0 in crypto. Don't understand it, too busy to learn, and risk averse. |
I’m the PP you responded to. Note that I did not mention gold because I agree that gold doesn’t have much value either. I mentioned real estate and stocks as assets that do have value. Regarding fiat currency (the dollar), it has value because it is backed by the world’s #1 superpower and is the reserve currency used in transactions throughout the world. Of course, it’s not good if it is endlessly printed, but I can’t make a leap from that to accepting that Bitcoin is the solution or that I should part with $100,000 of my hard-earned money to buy one Bitcoin. |
Bitcoin like gold is valuable precisely because it’s a monetary network that is NOT backed (ergo reliant upon) any government. Increasingly however it is being integrated within the USD system. It is a form of money anyone in the world with Internet access can access. It’s an amazing invention - worth studying. |
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40s, about $2M invested, 10% in BITO. It kicks off about $8-12k/month, which I invest in non-crypto or even crypto-adjacent funds. I think Bitcoin is as likely to go to $0 as it is to go to a million, so I prefer to make money off of other people's enthusiasm for the product than the product itself. If it went to $0 tomorrow I still would have better than doubled my initial investment.
This is all in Roth or Rollover IRAs so I don't have to bother with taxes on the capital distributions. We also have less than $1k scattered around various wallets in random tiny amounts of BTC, ETHE, Solana, etc. Evidence of past interest that is presently unmonitored. |
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Age 50
About 20% of my $3MM portfolio is in bitcoin. |
This is me too. I’m a slow and steady wins the race person. I know a little about crypto and I compare it to a Ponzi scheme …for now. But I do see it being our future. Right now it’s just too volatile for my liking. |
| I’m 54 and DH is 66. We have about 1.5 M invested. No bitcoin. But I feel like we need to learn more about it. My DH has pretty strong knowledge when it comes to finance, but he’s got a boomerish blind spot here. I am about a 6/10 when in comes to these skills so do rely on DH to a certain extent although our investment accounts are separate. |
It is used for “transactions.” |
This is a common misunderstanding. There is no requirement to buy in whole Bitcoins. Most transactions are in fractions of BTC - or as they are called: a "satoshi" or "sats". https://www.coindesk.com/learn/what-is-a-satoshi-understanding-the-smallest-unit-of-bitcoin Right now, you can get your feet wet with .005 BTC for about $500. That's mere pocket change for a man clearly of your stature and resource. |
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47. I have 20k of FBTC. I have about $10k in alt coins. My other money is in real estate and SP500.
Everyone here needs to understand that there is a ton of money to be made in crypto before it all crashes in a couple years. This entire administration is pro crypto, as is Congress. |
Or just buy one of the many low fee ETFs in your brokerage account |