HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesHello World | This is not the first crypto crash. Why so sad then?

Hello World | This is not the first crypto crash. Why so sad then?

It is surprising to see so many people crying foul over losing money on crypto.

May 26, 2021 / 18:32 IST
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Concerns about energy consumption and volatility around crypto have always been around. That is not new information.
Concerns about energy consumption and volatility around crypto have always been around. That is not new information.

Note to readers: Hello world is a program developers run to check if a newly installed programming language is working alright. Startups and tech companies are continuously launching new software to run the real world. This column will attempt to be the "Hello World" for the real world.

It was boom time in crypto land. You’d have to try really hard to lose money. XRP ripped.  ETH defied gravity. MANA was indeed from heaven and DOGE cocked a snook at earthians on its way up to Mars. Investors who got in early talked up the virtues of the currency and more investors bought into the phenomenon. And then the biggest crash since the Great crypto crash of 2018 began.

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Billionaire Elon Musk who earlier announced that his company Tesla will sell cars for Bitcoins backtracked on the Tesla-for-Bitcoin deal because Bitcoins take up a whole lot of energy to transact. As we know,  Tesla wants the world to function on sustainable energy in the long run. On popular American television show Saturday Night Live, Musk said DOGE was a hustle. Some big investors dumped crypto holdings. Prices fell.

Regular readers of this column will recall the story of the Smiths who held on to the IBM stock for generations but never sold. The sum and substance of Smith’s actions, as author George Goodman explains is, “It is a parable of pure capitalism, never jam today and a case of jam tomorrow; but as any of the Smiths will tell you, anyone, who has ever sold IBM has regretted it.”