You would be surprised how easy it is for people to get sucked into a crypto bubble vortex that makes you feel like you're missing out big time by not being invested in crypto.
I was pretty heavily involved in the personal finance community on Twitter and there's two camps.
1) VTSAX and chill (basically dump money into an ETF and forget about it)
2) Moar passive income by side hustles and crypto
The latter became more and more common and ultimately drowned out the former. I believe it's because the market was doing so well that folks' risk meter just wasn't registering.
Probably the same reason why people choose to get into MLMs.
> well that folks' risk meter just wasn't registering.
That's because they were probably still in school back in 2008. I remember the days of late October 2008 like it was yesterday, and back then I was a no-name computer programmer working for an independent mortgage broker, not a big finance schmuck from Wall Street.
That one is easy... FOMO - Fear Of Missing Out. People see the 10,000%+ returns extreme early adopters obtained and think they need to get in before the good-getting is done. Most of the time they're wrong and just throwing money into dark pits...
"Gamified" trading apps like Robin Hood have made it all too easy to feel much lower risk that it is in reality though.
For the rest, crypto can be part of a diversified investment strategy. Not all crypto is outright scams... but you do need to be able to handle the volatility.
I bought some (emphasis on the some, sadly) Bitcoin when it was $80. I’ll never get a return like that in my life. Other people are chasing that dragon. Unfortunately it leads them to burgeoning “shitcoins.”
It’s all fine if you view it like the lottery and put “fun money” into it. It’s not fine if it’s your primary investment vehicle. For what it’s worth I still think Bitcoin and Ethereum will be fine and bounce back up, eventually.
“they abolished the fundamental distinctions between investment and speculation… they ignored the price of a stock in determining whether or not it was a desirable purchase.”
Benjamin Graham & David L. Dodd, Security Analysis, 1934