2Semana·

How I beat the MSCI World by over 21,000% over 13 years

Part 2: How I helped launder the Bitcoin that was stolen from me and lost everything a second time.


You can find the first part of my investment story (incl. background and TL;DR) here: https://getqu.in/JldknL/


Nice to have you back for part 2. Before I resolve the cliffhanger from part 1, let's first take a look at another topic:


Financial development until mid-20s

Of course, there was still a world outside of Bitcoin for me. I was able to increase my salary to a good 36,000 euros gross after 8 years (including training). Simply through growing experience and further training. That gave me room to breathe again. Insurance and savings were now appropriate for my salary. And slowly but surely, with my modest lifestyle, I didn't know what else I could sensibly spend my money on. So I went to my trusted bank advisor and occasionally invested four-figure sums in managed funds with poor returns and nasty initial charges. I also regularly put money into various fixed-term deposit products. My goal, if I had one at all, was to build up equity for a property for my own use. I also took out a private pension insurance policy.


I continued to do this until around 2018. In between, however, a lot happened in my crypto portfolio.


How I lost everything several times

In 2014, my Bitcoin exchange, Mt Gox, unfortunately went bankrupt due to a hack or something similar. I had everything on Mt Gox and never cashed out. My scarce 10 $BTC (-0,01 %) and 1,000 - 2,000 USD were gone.


However, I didn't want to be discouraged by this and shortly afterwards started to build up a new portfolio on BTC-e, another crypto exchange. I also bought altcoins there for the first time. Of course, again without having understood anything. I seriously imagined that any coins worth billions could rise to a unit value like Bitcoin. I had never heard of market capitalization 🤦.


Of course, I hadn't learned anything from Mt. Gox and left all my coins on BTC-e. It came as it had to. The US Justice Department shut down BTC-e in 2017. Reason: BTC-e was involved in the money laundering of Mt Gox coins 😂. You can't make this stuff up. I helped launder my own stolen coins, so to speak 😅 and ended up losing everything twice.


More stupid decisions

Everything? Not quite. BTC-e came back as WEX.nz. Former BTC-e customers had the chance to get some of their former deposits back. So I was able to recover at least some of my coins.


As was to be expected, WEX.nz also disappeared from the scene without a trace a short time later. But in the meantime, I had finally learned my lesson. My coins were already safely stored on my hardware wallet at the time. At the same time, I decided to invest a few thousand euros in Bitcoin and randomly selected altcoins such as $ETH (+1,04 %), $DASH (+1,39 %), $XRP (+0,45 %) and $IOTA (+1,31 %) to invest. Of course, I still didn't understand what I was actually doing. I used Kraken and Binance as crypto exchanges.


This was also the time of ICOs (Initial Coin Offerings). Every fool created their own cryptocurrency and tried to sell it to the people with wild promises. Of course, I was also tempted by the quick money 🤦. I invested around 1,000 euros in the tokens of a crypto AI project (cryptics.tech), which promised to use AI to predict crypto price movements with sufficient accuracy to enable profitable trading. I actually traded for a few months following the AI's recommendations. But this project soon disappeared - along with my 1,000 euros.


As you can see, I'm pretty good at acting first and thinking later. Of course, that doesn't stop in part 3 either. But then it's even more fun because I've climbed the ladder in the meantime, increased my salary and was able to make stupid decisions with more money. I followed in the footsteps of my bank advisor, so to speak 🚀


You can now find the third part here: https://getqu.in/sfTZ3P/

attachment
127
45 Comentarios

Imagen de perfil
I like honest donkeys 👍🏻
12
Mostrar respuesta
Imagen de perfil
But it is precisely this "act first, think later" characteristic that often leads to success.
Be it through luck or simply a willingness to take risks that is rewarded in the end.
What is much more important afterwards is that you learn from your mistakes.
In your case, better late than never 😀
I know so many people who think everything is dead and simply don't get anywhere as a result.
Procrastination is usually easier than taking action.
4
Ver todas las 3 respuestas adicionales
Imagen de perfil
Your story must be in the GQ main page, as advice. Thanks for your honesty. Very brave!
3
Ver todas las 4 respuestas adicionales
2Semana
The btc-e chat was legendary ... those were the days ❤️
2
Mostrar respuesta
Imagen de perfil
Thanks to you. Great story. But I don't understand why you fell in again after MtGox. I started with BTC in 2016 and transferred directly to a paper wallet back then. That was also recommended back then
1
Ver todas las 10 respuestas adicionales
Imagen de perfil
2Semana
I find the parallel story to your Bitcoin adventures funny: Riester, building society savings, insurance...
BTC sounds more like an attempt to break out of this enclosure. Did your parents and savings bank advisors know about your adventures?
1
Ver todas las 4 respuestas adicionales
Imagen de perfil
2Semana
Good story and I'm looking forward to part 3. There have been repayments from MtGox in the meantime, haven't there? Did you sign up for the claims? I am curious!
1
Mostrar respuesta
Imagen de perfil
Thanks for sharing dear donkey...
1
Imagen de perfil
The altcoin seasons back then were great. A real gold-rush atmosphere. Bitrex, Poloniex and Cryptopia were my go-to places back then. I bought around 500,000 Dogecoin for around 0.1 BTC in 2017 and then bought a mobile home in 2022 with the proceeds from a sale of the remaining 280,000 Doge 🤣. Fortunately, I lost almost nothing on any exchanges. Except for 0.1 BTC on Cryptopia.
1
Mostrar respuesta
Imagen de perfil
Oh no, it's over again... when is part 3 coming 🤓???
1
Mostrar respuesta
Únase a la conversación