This is where you lose me on things like this ...
First, I do not have an MBA from a top school in investment banking. Our advisor can quickly get my eyes rolling when he starts to talk about some of the higher level bond & investment instruments he has us in. Crypto is another level. I have learned to hire people smarter than me that I trust to handle things like investing, plumbing, & electrical work.
Second, you are stating that you can hide assets & gains from the Gov't. Anytime you intentionally, or unintentionally through lack of knowledge or understanding, hide assets/gains from the Gov't, time to get nervous. I don't buy the argument that the Gov't cannot find out what you have made income or profits. If the upside is what you say it is, do you really think the Gov't will ignore? If income is being made or profits realized, the Govt will find a way to track & tax.
Third, you said OG's role their eyes at this stuff. As someone becoming an OG, the reason you develop a healthy bit of skepticism where money and investing is involved, is because you have seen a few things so you know a few things. I have seen enough of the Madoff, Ponzi, Belfort, etc. scams to know that people can get snake charmed into only seeing the upside. Greed tends to blind people to understanding risk or downside.
I am not telling others to avoid, but you are only promoting the upside based on assumptions & circumstances that can quickly change.
Tree Spud,
Putting me under the fire! I love it. There are always two sides to everything so I will do my best to answer on behalf on the downside. Also, given it is labeled a commodity I do not think you can be taxed until you take profit in USD.
Before I start there, I need to clear up the decentralization aspect of crypto. When you sign up for the right cryptocurrency wallet you do not use your name, email, SS number, or any personal information for that matter. The only way I can be linked to my assets are if:
1. I take profits from my account and they make their long journey back to my bank (USD).
2. Somehow, my computer or phone (the only affiliation between me and my assets) are compromised. That does not sound legal but I am sure it happens
This can be avoided by having what is called a cold wallet. An offline device that stores your hundreds of codes that are comprised of your wallets and exchanges. Your accounts will always balance at 0 and your offline device holds the keys to you wallets.
I would say there are three large downfalls of cryptocurrency.
1. You are right, one day the government will attempt to put their hand in it. How they will do it, I am not sure. Tax the retailers? I don't know. I am not affiliated with my account so I do not think the IRS can look me up. I will let you know next tax season. If they manage to find out (again, I do not take profits, yet.) then I have no clue.
2. Hackers..... They exist everywhere. The security behind crypto exchanges is pretty tight but it is definitely a risk. The more you want for security the more you get. You can actually store your crypto offline in a ledger wallet. They typically look like USB drives but some have touch screens or look like calculators.
3. Poor investments; similar to stocks, crypto has it's share of poor investments. It is all about what the platform is being used for. Some cryptocurrencies are USD related. Their only purpose is to mimic the USD and be a secondary way to have a bank account. Others specialize in peer to peer transactions. You buy me coffee and I send you 0.0000001 bitcoin (not exact but close). Others were created for reasons that are unknown, have a poor foundation, and or the team behind it had benevolent intentions. These coins or tokens can disappear overnight. They are gone. Almost like they never existed.
Skepticism is a great quality. I am very skeptical myself I would like to think. I do not have an MBA or anything fancy. Just an associates degree in marketing. I talk with my investor all the time and I understand because I took the time to read up. They are smart people, but typically you need to carry the reigns here and there. It is a scary idea; putting money into the some online entity that some asian guy made 12 years ago. If you would have bought $10 back then, you would own 166 bitcoin that would be worth $6,166,666 today. That in itself is scary. It also is worth looking into; even if it is just a little bit. Granted you do not have to buy entire bitcoins. You can buy little baby pieces as small as $5