Hey
@Ed209, how is it going? Sorry I couldn't respond much earlier, busy preparing for a job interview.
In the last 12 years, nothing has come remotely close to matching the kind of returns that can be made, but it's not for the faint-hearted, or for newbies. It can wreck you in a heartbeat if you don't know what you're doing. The volatility is what allows you to make the insane gains, and adoption continues to grow year on year. To put it another way, the only way anyone could have possibly lost any money, so far, is by panic selling or by buying a scam shit coin. Even with this current crash, my core holdings are still up by over 20x, and I took profits on the way up at much higher margin intervals. I also made many multi-bagger trades along the way. My original investment came out a long time ago along with a ton of profit. It's a free ride from here for me.
Crypto may have produced the best returns in the last decade, but that's because it's a speculative asset that's highly volatile. It works like stock but without a companies actual performance or government regulations to reign in any insanity that it's investors try to do with it. That's all going to change very soon.
You say it's not something for newbies which I wholeheartedly agree with, but the reality with speculative assets like Crypto is that it actually thrives and preys on newbies buying up these coins.
The notion that Crypto has brought accumulating life changing wealth for a couple hundreds of people... while true, doesn't really impress me. That statement sounds almost scam-like and manipulative to get vulnerable people who are likely to panic sell involved in the Crypto markets. For every winner, there's going to be a whole bunch of losers.
If it's to make the most money possible then there's no better asset class, performance-wise, than the crypto markets.
Making the most money possible is the mindset Wall Street people have. I would say a modest investor's main use for the markets would be goals such as retirement planning and to protect purchasing power. This can easily be achieved through the purchase of low-cost broad based index funds (thank you Jack Bogle) or Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and holding them in tax-sheltered accounts for decades. With this, you aren't trying to time the market, rather you are betting on society to pretty much continue and flourish (total world stock market indexes specifically). If all of society crumbles, your investments will be the last thing to worry about. Even if the index fund has produced average returns, average is still very good in the Wall Street sense. Only 1/4 of actively managed funds were able to outperform an index fund like Vanguard's S&P 500 fund over a 10-year period. You can imagine the number being even more smaller over 20, 30 years down the line. Rock bottom costs along with low expense ratios is something you can control and then simply just let compound interest work its magic.
Keep in mind my advocacy for index funds comes from a US centric POV due to the many tax sheltered accounts available here which allow for tax free growth. Not sure what's offered in the UK. An ISA account only?
I've marked out a 9-year chart of Bitcoin. The green circles show where retail often turn up, and the red circles show where they usually get flushed out. It's pretty much: buy, get wrecked, buy, get wrecked, buy, get wrecked, etc, over and over again. Those circles represent 30-85% price corrections. Now, look at the blue dots; the ones that bought and forgot about it, and ignored all the noise. What happened to them? They all accumulated life-changing wealth.
All markets are the same, but the boom and bust cycles in crypto occur at a much faster rate. People shouldn't really dabble in these things if they don't understand what they're doing. Of course, it's not for everyone, and there are plenty of other options that will give steady but slower returns if the volatility is too much to handle.
When I look at your chart (thank you btw), I get this sense that the greater fools theory along with market manipulation is being properly demonstrated here. Get the retail investors to buy something that's already overvalued and make them think the value is still gonna go up. I believe Elon Musk holds a massive position in Bitcoin and has been credited for raising the prices of cryptocurrency through a series of tweets in the past.
You might end up fine, but it is guaranteed the majority will not. It is design.
I guess kudos to those that were able to buy at the right time in something that fluctuates wildly even by stock market standards and held long enough for mass gains. I heard about 100,000 people have over $million in Bitcoin now. That's nice and all, but it's still a small amount of people succeeding in the grand scheme of things. Market timing is something that's quite difficult to consistently do and it seems like you capitalized on it. I'm going to assume you also had a considerable amount of disposable income at your service as well, but regardless... big congrats to you.
In short, Crypto is too volatile to serve as actual currency and it's not something I would recommend the common investors get involved in, so I agree with you there, but to say it's only way to make to make exponential wealth is where I agree to disagree. There are other simpler and more cheaper ways to accumulate wealth if one plans to have an investment career of over 40 years.
Also... If quantum computing delivers, that very well could disrupt all of Crypto, but for now, that is speculation. I do find the emergence of blockchain technology interesting though.