I agree that some crypto folks may not have basic personal finance education (although some people investing in stocks, and promoting that to others, also do not have basic personal finance education). I also agree though that some cryptos basically print money (as one example, go look into the inflation rate of Curve DAO, a popular DeFi protocol, which I don't invest in, due to the inflation rate).
Bitcoin does not print money or have a high inflation rate, and that is the point of it (it was the original cryptocurrency that took off, so saying that the whole crypto sphere is bad is kind of like saying that because there is some bad software that all software is bad, or that because there is one stock that is bad that all stocks are bad). The max supply of Bitcoin is capped. I don't think that Bitcoin is the only digital asset worth investing in, but I also don't think it is valid to claim that all crypto is printing money, or that all crypto is bad.
I am a crypto fan. I don't think that it's the only way of storing wealth. I also invest in an S&P 500 index. I do think that crypto has a higher potential to beat inflation over time, with inflation currently at 5.4% [1], vs stocks. US stocks have been propped up by The Fed printing USD (which they can due to it being the world reserve currency, which may or may not last forever) and investing it into Wall Street, as well as dropping lending rates to essentially zero, since the March 2020 crash. The Fed has already signaled their intention to raise rates in the next few years, which would damper some of the bullishness of the stock market.
Crypto is a new asset class that investors can consider if they have some risk tolerance, with the potential for a high reward. The thing that I think a lot of people miss is that traditional finance is by no means perfect. There are negative interest rates in some parts of the world (i.e. see Europe). There have been synthetic assets in traditional finance like CDO's (i.e. see The Big Short), which are detached from reality (and assets like that will continue to be created because big money will continue to be bailed out). The current P/E ratios of even some popular stocks (i.e. TSLA) don't reflect traditional fundamentals, so there is a lot of speculation, just like with crypto (I don't think that speculation is bad, there are folks betting on what a company or a technology can become in the future). Also, the US Debt increases every year, with no signal that they will ever pay it back. Based on all this, I think it is worth considering some other asset classes to invest in vs purely traditional finance.
Anyway, just because crypto is not perfect and the space has many digital assets (and not everyone understands them), it doesn't mean that as a whole that it's bad and should be destroyed. There's so much already invested in the crypto space, and it's not just capital, it's startups and human time invested (like any other software project or field). People will continue down this path in one way or another. Regulation will likely mature the space and more people will feel comfortable to invest in it based on that. I think that crypto will at least exist alongside traditional finance, even if it does not completely transform it, and it's worth being open to seeing how this technology can benefit us all.
Bitcoin does not print money or have a high inflation rate, and that is the point of it (it was the original cryptocurrency that took off, so saying that the whole crypto sphere is bad is kind of like saying that because there is some bad software that all software is bad, or that because there is one stock that is bad that all stocks are bad). The max supply of Bitcoin is capped. I don't think that Bitcoin is the only digital asset worth investing in, but I also don't think it is valid to claim that all crypto is printing money, or that all crypto is bad.
I am a crypto fan. I don't think that it's the only way of storing wealth. I also invest in an S&P 500 index. I do think that crypto has a higher potential to beat inflation over time, with inflation currently at 5.4% [1], vs stocks. US stocks have been propped up by The Fed printing USD (which they can due to it being the world reserve currency, which may or may not last forever) and investing it into Wall Street, as well as dropping lending rates to essentially zero, since the March 2020 crash. The Fed has already signaled their intention to raise rates in the next few years, which would damper some of the bullishness of the stock market.
Crypto is a new asset class that investors can consider if they have some risk tolerance, with the potential for a high reward. The thing that I think a lot of people miss is that traditional finance is by no means perfect. There are negative interest rates in some parts of the world (i.e. see Europe). There have been synthetic assets in traditional finance like CDO's (i.e. see The Big Short), which are detached from reality (and assets like that will continue to be created because big money will continue to be bailed out). The current P/E ratios of even some popular stocks (i.e. TSLA) don't reflect traditional fundamentals, so there is a lot of speculation, just like with crypto (I don't think that speculation is bad, there are folks betting on what a company or a technology can become in the future). Also, the US Debt increases every year, with no signal that they will ever pay it back. Based on all this, I think it is worth considering some other asset classes to invest in vs purely traditional finance.
Anyway, just because crypto is not perfect and the space has many digital assets (and not everyone understands them), it doesn't mean that as a whole that it's bad and should be destroyed. There's so much already invested in the crypto space, and it's not just capital, it's startups and human time invested (like any other software project or field). People will continue down this path in one way or another. Regulation will likely mature the space and more people will feel comfortable to invest in it based on that. I think that crypto will at least exist alongside traditional finance, even if it does not completely transform it, and it's worth being open to seeing how this technology can benefit us all.
[1] https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/inflation/current-infl...