Why are young people around the world flocking into the cryptocurrency space?
At 44 years old, Zhao Changpeng, the founder of Binance, has become the new 'richest Chinese' and 'one of the top ten billionaires' in just 4 years.
Li Xiaolai, an English teacher at New Oriental, turned 100,000 bitcoins into 13.5 billion in cash, realizing the dream of becoming wealthy overnight.
Guo Hongcai, known as 'Master Bao', went from selling beef to becoming a Bitcoin angel investor, dressed in a t-shirt and slippers, challenging the suit-wearing financial elites, and flipped his fortune overnight!
Erik Finman, a 17-year-old high school dropout, took the 1000 dollars his grandmother gave him and invested in Bitcoin. Today, he has a nine-figure net worth and is a key investor in a Silicon Valley cryptocurrency startup.
Liang Xi used a 1000 yuan high-risk strategy to make a leveraged trade, earning nearly 40 million yuan in one market movement, thus becoming a sensation in the crypto world. And so on...
These wealth myths in the cryptocurrency space have attracted wave after wave of young people to enter. They firmly believe that an investment of tens of thousands of yuan can multiply at least 1000 times, and young people worldwide are rushing into the crypto space, with some staring at the market all night under the temptation of huge profits!
In India, 75 million young people have started buying coins, including programmers and college students, who passionately discuss market trends at night more than they do about women.
In the United States, 28 million people are participating, including high school students, Silicon Valley residents, and Wall Street professionals; it's no longer just a small circle.
In South Korea, the entire nation is trading cryptocurrencies.
In South America and Southeast Asia, the trend is also strong:
In Brazil, one in every five people is trading coins, while Indonesia has over 20 million people on board, with enthusiasm surpassing many developed countries.
The entire cryptocurrency market now has 560 million participants, half of whom are young people aged 18-34, especially in Asia, where the rush is the most intense.
However, most people who enter are just paying tuition fees.
From this scale, it seems that this is no longer a simple 'speculative wave'; it may be a real rewriting of the wealth landscape.
In the past, many said 'trading coins is a speculation for a few', but judging by the current spread, it increasingly resembles a new game initiated by the younger generation themselves. How this game plays out and who will laugh last remains to be seen. Currently, our country holds a strict regulatory and clear prohibitory stance on virtual currency. Investment carries risks, and market entry requires caution. We remind all young people not to be blinded by the myth of becoming rich overnight. Most who enter the market and play in the wrong direction are just paying tuition fees and leaving alone!
Be sure that Brother Kun won’t get lost!