Rat Poison? Millennial Investors Prefer Bitcoin To Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway

2019-12-11 20:00

Bitcoin has in the past been called a Ponzi scheme, a scam, a tool for money laundering and criminal activities, and even has been dubbed rat poison by the Oracle of Omaha himself, Warren Buffett.

But that “rat poison” is a more sought after investment in millennial investors than the Buffett-backed Berkshire Hathaway, and many other top stocks.

Bitcoin Outranks Traditional Stocks In Millennial Investors

Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin , Ethereum, Ripple, and thousands and thousands more, are an emerging asset class that despite being new, untested, and unproven, are a more appealing investment to millennial investors than many of today’s top-performing stocks.

Related Reading | Bolster Your Personal Opsec With This Crypto Investor Checklist

According to a new report from brokerage firm Charles Schwab, it shows how the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust from Grayscale Investments stacks up against the likes of Netflix, Walk Disney, Microsoft, and Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.

The study surveyed a number of millennials, gen Xers, and baby boomers, and found that of the millennial subset, Grayscale’s Bitcoin Trust received more inflow than Walt Disney, Microsoft, Netflix, Alibaba, and Berkshire Hathaway.

The only traditional stock investments that outshined Bitcoin in millennial investors, were Facebook, Tesla, Apple, and Amazon. Bitcoin was nowhere to be found within the top-ranked investments in gen X or baby boomer groups.

Why BTC And Not Netflix, Microsoft, and Other Traditional Assets?

But why Bitcoin and not less-risky stocks or other traditional investments? Millennials were raised alongside the emergence of the internet, and are far more tech-savvy and open to advancements in technology, allowing them to adapt to changes faster than their older counterparts.

Millennials also watched and witnessed the wealth generated during the dot com boom, but were too young to participate. Many of them refuse to miss out on what may be as revolutionary and disruptive of a technology – potentially even more so.

Lastly, millennials have developed distrust in modern governments and the fiat currencies issued by them. Debt is skyrocketing, and the global economy teeters in the balance being grossly mismanaged by world leaders.

This distrust in governments and power-controlling individuals has caused millennials to lean toward trustless, decentralized technologies that remove the need for a controlling third-party. Bitcoin is this, but for money – which makes the entire world go round.

Related Reading | Logarithmic Growth Curve Charts Bitcoin Price At $170K in 2028

Because Bitcoin has such potential, millennials investors are willing to risk it all on the crypto asset, in hopes of not only becoming rich but ushering in the future of money as we know it. And with Bitcoin price predicted to reach over $100,000 to as much as $1 million per BTC, it could create an entirely new generation of wealth.

Featured image from Shutterstock

The post Rat Poison? Millennial Investors Prefer Bitcoin To Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway appeared first on NewsBTC.

Similar to Notcoin - Blum - Airdrops In 2024

origin »

Bitcoin (BTC) íà Currencies.ru

$ 95539.07 (-0.07%)
Îáúåì 24H $40.596b
Èçìåíåèÿ 24h: -2.00 %, 7d: -7.22 %
Cåãîäíÿ L: $95217.68 - H: $97458.26
Êàïèòàëèçàöèÿ $1892.106b Rank 1
Öåíà â ÷àñ íîâîñòè $ 7188.75 (1229.01%)

rat buffett bitcoin poison even activities criminal

rat buffett → Ðåçóëüòàòîâ: 18


Bitcoin’s returns in 10 years trump Berkshire Hathaway’s returns since 1964

One of the biggest struggles faced by Bitcoin and the rest of the cryptocurrency market has been to convince the mainstream ecosystem of its benefits and use-cases. One of the biggest naysayers of the cryptocurrency industry is Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett, who once compared the world’s largest cryptocurrency to rat poison.

2019-6-12 20:00


What Bitcoin Hater Warren Buffett Thinks of Crypto Doesn’t Matter, Here’s Why

To most in the cryptocurrency community, Bitcoin (BTC) is a paradigm-shifting asset with unlimited potential. But to Warren Buffett, one of the world’s most well-respected investors, it is something with little-to-zero intrinsic value, and resembles “rat poison” more than it does shares in his favorite companies: Coca-Cola, Dairy Queen, or GEICO.

2019-6-7 14:00


Tron’s [TRX] ecosystem blooms as DApps and recent developments make waves

Tron’s [TRX] popularity was off the charts on Tuesday after Tron Foundation CEO Justin Sun announced his winning bid to have lunch with the crypto-skeptic, Warren Buffett. Buffett, who once called Bitcoin “rat poison squared,” will meet with Sun and others from the cryptoverse, and the bet is on whether or not Sun will be […] The post Tron’s [TRX] ecosystem blooms as DApps and recent developments make waves appeared first on AMBCrypto.

2019-6-6 00:30


Warren Buffett Takes a Moment to Insult Bitcoin at His Berkshire Hathaway’s Annual Meeting

There is not any doubt in the cryptocurrency industry, regarding the way that Warren Buffett feels about Bitcoin, or “rat poison squared,” as he calls it. After the recent annual meeting of Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett practically doubled down on his statements, saying that the cryptocurrency is “a gambling device,” bringing attention to the many scams […]

2019-5-5 06:54


Warren Buffett Buys Amazon Stock; Will He Change His Mind On ‘Rat Poison’ Bitcoin?

By CCN. com: Berkshire Hathaway just bought its first Amazon shares, Berkshire founder and CEO Warren Buffett revealed to CNBC Thursday night. On the eve of an annual Berkshire shareholders meeting in Omaha, Buffett told CNBC that someone at Berkshire’s asset management desk just invested in some Amazon shares, but “it wasn’t me.

2019-5-3 10:19


Max Keiser on Bitcoin Cynic Warren Buffett: ‘He’s a Complete Failure’

Appearing for an interview with BlockTV, Max Keiser explained why he thinks Warren Buffett has been throwing shade at the crypto community. Keiser did not hold back: I think he feels insecure. Without the bailouts of 2008, without the access to free money from central banks, without stock buybacks – that were up until recently illegal – Warren Buffett’s performance would be close to zero.

2019-3-5 22:11