Robert Kiyosaki has a long history of predictions. And ironically, almost all of them are...WRONG. Robert Kiyosaki is best known for his classic personal finance book "Rich Dad, Poor Dad". Additionally, he is also very well-known for consistently making predictions about #Bitcoin and the financial markets. The problem is: looking back at the data, the market always seems to be moving in the opposite direction. Let's quickly review 👇 ▪️ Bitcoin will reach $75,000 in 2023 → In reality: it has never exceeded $74,000. ▪️ Bitcoin will reach $350,000 by August 2024 → This did not happen. ▪️ Bitcoin will reach $500,000 by the end of 2025 → It's still just a promise… ▪️ Bitcoin will be in the range of $175,000 – $350,000 in 2025. → The market hasn't seen anything to confirm this yet, and it's already 2026 😂 But it's not just Bitcoin 👇 ▪️ “The biggest collapse in history” is about to happen (2018) → In reality: The S&P 500 subsequently rose 115%. ▪️ The Covid crash has “only just begun” (2020) → The following year, the S&P 500 increased by another 53%. ▪️ “Everything will collapse” (2020) ▪️ “The massive collapse in October” (2021) Nothing happened. ▪️ “Everything bubbles → everything collapses” (2022) ▪️ “The market has started to crash” (2024) → In reality: the market increased by 29%. 🤔 Is it a coincidence, or is this actually the strongest inverse indicator in the market? Thanks to author @StarPlatinum_ for Chia 😁
This article is machine translated
Show original

Upside GM
@gm_upside
02-06
Chân dung người đặt niềm tin dài hạn vào Bitcoin
> Là Michael Saylor
> Lớn lên trong các căn cứ của Không quân Mỹ
> Gia đình quân đội
> Học cực giỏi, vào thẳng MIT
> Không thể trở thành phi công vì vấn đề tim mạch
> Rẽ hướng sang phần mềm và ở lại với x.com/gm_upside/stat…


Sector:
From Twitter
Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
Like
Add to Favorites
Comments
Share
Relevant content






