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NZ Bitcoin investor sees value crash 32%, says still safer than buying a house

NZ Bitcoin investor sees value crash 32 says still safer than buying a house
A Hamilton-based investor isn't panicking as the value of his Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies crashes, but others say they've lost their life savings.

Hamilton-based Bitcoin investor Bruno Boni​ has seen the value of his Bitcoin and other cryptocurrency investments dive 32% but still believes it is safer than trying to buy a house in New Zealand.

A crypto sell-off has resulted in the shedding of more than US$200 billion from the market in a single day, stemming in part from a crash in Terra, a stablecoin which is meant to be protected from volatility.

The price of bitcoin reportedly fell as low US$25,919.33 (NZ$41564.03).

Many Reddit users were posting stories about the consequences of losing their money from their Terra and Luna cryptocurrency investments, with some of them saying they had lost their life savings.

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One user said they had lost more than US$450,000 and could not pay the bank. Another user, No-Forever, wrote that they would have made US$25,000 if they had sold the cryptocurrency earlier.

"But I got greedy hoping to get more money so I can at least afford a down payment for a house for my family. I guess no house and savings then."

There was a long list of suicide prevention hotlines posted at the top of the TerraLuna Reddit page – including Australia's LifeLine, and similar organisations from the United States, Britain, Spain, China, Sweden, and 90 other countries.

A lot of people are still sceptical about Bitcoin, but its reputation is better than that of cryptocurrencies in general, says Bruno Boni.

Kin Cheung/AP

A lot of people are still sceptical about Bitcoin, but its reputation is better than that of cryptocurrencies in general, says Bruno Boni.

In the past five years, Boni has seen the price of Bitcoin swing between a high of US$69,000 and the current low, but he is not panicking.

“I see a lot of people, myself included, who see Bitcoin as a hope of perhaps one day being able to buy a house.

“At current prices, I have given up on buying a house because in my opinion it’s just too expensive, and the risk of buying a $1m house, which interest rates going up, it’s just too risky.”

“Bitcoin went up to US$69,000, let’s say it goes to US$150,000, let’s say it goes to US$200,000, so maybe one day it can become a down payment for a house.

“A lot of friends I have here are below 35, this is a sentiment a lot of people have below 35, a lot of people just gave up and some of these friends also invest in crypto.”

He had decided not to invest in Terra, with his portfolio split between Bitcoin and a cryptocurrency called Polkadot. The loss he had on paper was not too bad compared to the decline in some technology stocks, he said, which were quite closely correlated to cryptocurrencies.

“From 2017 to 2018 we had a bear market, where everything crashed really hard, so I pretty much parked there, I just kept Bitcoins, but I didn’t do much, and I went back in 2019, 2020 when the market started coming back to life.”

Initially he did not invest in Bitcoin, choosing other cryptocurrencies.

“Most of them didn't perform very well, I had some bad choices, so I was in the negative for a long time but then with Polkadot I managed to go back to not zero but to not having losses any more, and from there just really sticking with Bitcoin as a safer option.”

The cryptocurrency market was similar to the early dot-com era boom, with many small startups emerging, some good and some bad, he said.

“I think most people in general still see crypto as a scam, as a Ponzi scheme. Usually people that do take time to study a little bit see there are a lot of good projects, a lot of real advancements and there is a lot of value, both in Bitcoin and in crypto for different reasons.”

Bitcoin’s reputation was better than that of cryptocurrencies in general, which were seen as a “wild West”, not helped by the most recent collapse of the Terra Luna project, he said.

“It’s like the early dotcom era when people lost their entire life savings in some companies and stocks, so it’s still really the wild West.

“Bitcoin is one thing, I think it is pretty safe for people to invest because there is no single company behind it, no single country behind it, it’s been around for 14 years now, but crypto in general you need to be really on top of it, all the time, you really need to know what you’re doing, otherwise it’s really risky.”

Boni said a lot of people investing in cryptocurrencies did not have enough financial understanding.

“It’s very, very easy for you to lose a lot of money if you don’t know what you’re doing, and of course people don’t go to something that’s safe and consolidated like Bitcoin because the amount of money you can make is not that much.”

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