DURING THE PAST YEAR OF covid-induced market mania, cryptocurrencies have gone up so much—bitcoin is up about sixfold, while many other crypto projects are up far, far more—that even reluctant Wall Street institutions have started tiptoeing into the arena. A blazing rally that began this month has seen bitcoin shoot up 50 percent in a few weeks. But doubters remain, and their ranks just happen to include many of the same prominent investors who saw the financial crisis of 2008 coming.
Hedge-fund mogul John Paulson, who was behind “the greatest trade ever”—he made $4 billion on his short of subprime mortgages—thinks cryptocurrencies will prove to be “worthless.” Michael Burry, the quirky hedge-fund manager made famous in The Big Short movie, complains that no one is paying attention to crypto’s leverage. For months, he’s been suggesting bitcoin is on the precipice of collapse. Nassim Nicholas Taleb, whose now-canonical book The Black Swan warned about the dangers of unpredictable events just ahead of the subprime crash, argues that bitcoin is functionally a Ponzi scheme. And hedge-fund billionaire and hard-money acolyte Paul Singer, who in 2006 predicted a “wipeout” in mortgage securities, thinks cryptocurrencies are a fraud. In a January letter to investors, he wrote, “We continue to press on for the day when we can say, ‘We told you so.’”
This story is from the October 25 - November 7, 2021 edition of New York magazine.
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This story is from the October 25 - November 7, 2021 edition of New York magazine.
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