I have a friend in Emergency Medicine who has been investing aggressively in cryptocurrencies since he received his first residency paycheck. I remember having a drink with him back in 2016 while we were in med school and he was so adamant that Bitcoin would eventually explode. I decided to go the stocks and bonds route. Fast forward 6 years and a couple days ago, he just passed the 1 MILLION DOLLAR asset mark. He is just 14 months out of residency. He has no plans to sell. He's invested somewhere around $300k into crypto and has had a $500k gain over the last few years. He has other accounts as well such as solo 401k and SEP IRA, but his portfolio is 80% crypto and 20% stocks and bonds. His risk tolerance is obviously very high. He's had days where he lost 40% of his portfolio, but never flinched...and now he's a BITCOIN MILLIONAIRE.
This is not me, this is actually my friend. He's in his low 30s. He sent me screenshots of his balances, so I know it's real. He drives a mid 2000s Honda Civic. Just thought I would put this out there in case anyone on here has had a similar experience and any feedback on how to cope with fear of missing out.
Edit: he was born in India with nothing to his name. He came to the US with his parents when he was a teenager and didn't speak English. He grew up sleeping on the floor of his parents gas station during high school. He doesn't even think his story is a big deal. But I remind him every time I see him, what he has done is a very big deal and most couldn't do it. I think his background influences his risk tolerance.
This is not me, this is actually my friend. He's in his low 30s. He sent me screenshots of his balances, so I know it's real. He drives a mid 2000s Honda Civic. Just thought I would put this out there in case anyone on here has had a similar experience and any feedback on how to cope with fear of missing out.
Edit: he was born in India with nothing to his name. He came to the US with his parents when he was a teenager and didn't speak English. He grew up sleeping on the floor of his parents gas station during high school. He doesn't even think his story is a big deal. But I remind him every time I see him, what he has done is a very big deal and most couldn't do it. I think his background influences his risk tolerance.
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