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Bitcoin Businesses The Almighty Buck

SoftBank Founder Masayoshi Son Lost $130 Million on Bitcoin (wsj.com) 131

Masayoshi Son, the billionaire founder of SoftBank Group, made a huge personal bet on bitcoin just as prices for the digital currency peaked, losing more than $130 million when he sold out, WSJ (paywalled) reported Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. From the report (alternative source): Mr. Son, who launched the world's biggest venture-capital fund on the strength of his long-term investing acumen, made the investment at the recommendation of a well-known bitcoin booster, whose investment firm SoftBank bought in 2017, the people said. The investment came at the peak of the bitcoin frenzy in late 2017 after the digital currency had already risen more than 10 fold that year. The exact size of the bet couldn't be determined, but bitcoin peaked at nearly $20,000 in mid December 2017 and Mr. Son sold in early 2018 after bitcoin had plummeted, the people said.
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SoftBank Founder Masayoshi Son Lost $130 Million on Bitcoin

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  • by r2kordmaa ( 1163933 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @11:05AM (#58477704)
    Buy high, sell low, that's the way I roll.
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      Buy high, sell low, that's the way I roll.

      I wonder how many bitcoins the "well known booster" was holding when he talked Son into buying in. I would be willing to bet he cashed out a good amount at the $20k peak.

  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @11:06AM (#58477706)

    bitcoin, soaking gullible people again and again, so hilarious

  • Somewhat... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fred911 ( 83970 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @11:08AM (#58477726) Journal

    "losing more than $130 million when he sold out"

    He actually lost when he executed a poor entry choice, he just realized the loss when he sold.

    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      Markets move up and down, he should have just held it. The 60% who lose are panic sellers.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        It says he sold in early 2018. That means he made at least twice as much as if he sold at any point since (including today).

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          Your point being? He should have shorted his own position and then bought back at a different yet lower point?

          • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

            The point: if he'd followed your advice to hold, he would have lost at least twice as much as he did.

            • That is the point. If he was still holding it, he wouldn't have lost anything yet.

              Arguing against that is just to deny the flow of time. When you take whataboutism to the level of not understanding the sequence of events, that is rather pathetic.

              When they say "buy low, sell high" they mean it literally. They mean if it isn't higher, don't sell it. It is actual correct advice, not a pithy statement that is only true when the price goes up. Human emotion makes it hard for most people to follow this advice, ev

              • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

                You're falling prey to the sunk cost fallacy. When you're evaluating whether to buy *or* sell an investment, the only question is whether you expect it to go up or down in the future. The price you bought it for is immaterial.

                In general, "buy low, sell high" does tend to work, because diversified investments have a positive expected return. As you point out, it might help prevent some emotional investors from making bad decisions. A better strategy is to "buy, and forget about it." But bitcoin, particularly

              • by jythie ( 914043 )
                If he was still holding it, he would be unable to use that capital to invest in something more likely to produce a return.
              • When they say "buy low, sell high" they mean it literally. They mean if it isn't higher, don't sell it. It is actual correct advice, not a pithy statement that is only true when the price goes up. Human emotion makes it hard for most people to follow this advice, even though it is simple, basic, and clear.

                This same kind of literalism is responsible for naive faith in Martingales [wikipedia.org].

                Since a gambler with infinite wealth will, almost surely, eventually flip heads, the martingale betting strategy was seen as a sur

            • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

              He wouldn't have lost anything because he wouldn't have sold at any of the points between then and now. He chose a poor entry point, it is a tough thing to swallow but it means your money is tied up, not lost.

              I do short and mid-terms trades on stock but only when I'm prepared to hold it long. If things trend the wrong way you just adjust the strategy converting your trade to a mid term or long term hold. He might have to hold for ten or fifteen years but for $130million dollars that certainly isn't beyond r

              • We need a -1 modifier for posts so dumb they are indistinguishable from trolling.
          • by fred911 ( 83970 )

            In order to sell a security short, you first must borrow the quantity you care to sell. That means your broker must have and be willing to loan you the security. I don't believe any broker will loan you securities you are already in possession of and it's probably against the law (don't remember). Second off, there's no brokers that loan bitcoin, so you can't sell it short.

            So selling bitcoin short without a futures contract doesn't happen.

    • Or, he stopped further loss by getting the fuck out of this loser he should have never gotten into.

  • There is a God(s)

  • Is it me, or does the Bitcoin thing repeatedly set itself up as a 3 card monty where people in the know rake financial people over the coals?

    • people in the know rake financial people over the coals?

      Nobody is "in the know". There is no puppeteer pulling the strings.

      Some people win, some lose. But there are more losers than winners because much of the money is going to the power companies.

      • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

        There are more losers than winners in literally every market. The winners profits come from the losers. It is no different in the foreign exchange, the stock market, etc. In order for someone to win somone(s) have to lose.

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Stock markets produce winners on average. In fact, it's easy to win with high confidence: make a diversified investment and hold it for a while.

          Casinos, lotteries and con games redistribute wealth. Within a fairly small margin, the average take is break even.

          Bitcoin has a very significant negative average because of the necessity to burn electricity.

          • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

            "Stock markets produce winners on average. In fact, it's easy to win with high confidence: make a diversified investment and hold it for a while."

            False. You seem to be confusing bitcoin mining with the speculative price. Burning electricity only serves to set a floor on the cost much like the cost of diesel fuel helps set a floor on the gold market. But either can actually be overrun because there is more bitcoin and gold in the world than being mined and it recirculates. All having to pay an electricity bi

            • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

              "False. You seem to be confusing bitcoin mining with the speculative price."

              Maybe English is your second language? The very sentence you quoted started with "Stock markets." Not discussing bitcoin.

              The rest of your post is nonsense. You can confirm for yourself that the expected return in the stock market is positive. Just look at the historical price over some reasonable length of time (e.g. ten years) for any major index.

              • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

                You could try actually looking at the comment I replied to... especially since you wrote it. False and the stock information was for the quoted portion of your comment. The bitcoin comments relate to your bitcoin related comments.

                Casinos, lotteries, and con's I didn't comment on because they are unrelated, there is a "house" and the game ensures the house wins. They have no relation to peer trading on open markets.

          • Bitcoin has a very significant negative average because of the necessity to burn electricity.

            True for mining, but at this point, mining is not practical. The main reason bitcoin is negative is because it represents nothing tangible of value (unlike stocks which represent shares in an actual enterprise), and there's no regulation to keep it from being used as a tool to defraud people. It's basically designed to be a volatile commodity.

            Cryptocurrency is basically a Ponzi Scheme. Like some Ponzi Schemes,

            • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

              Bitcoin also requires burning electricity for processing transactions. You're correct though, pretty much any activity requires resources, but the expectation is that it produces some value that is greater. Bitcoin could do that, but it doesn't seem to.

              Bitcoin is *worse* than a Ponzi scheme though. Most cons, including Ponzi schemes, are designed to be as efficient as possible. The victims lose lots of money, but the perpetrators gain virtually all of it. It's not fair, but very little wealth is destroyed.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    A fool and his money are soon parted. Buying Bitcoin at $20K was not the foolish thing. The foolish thing was selling it at $3000 when it's obvious that Bitcoin will be $100,000 by the end of this year.

    Idiot.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    children of milionaires often loose money in stupid ways

  • than plenty in any other area of the financial sector. For example, many funds do significantly worse than the market indexes, yet people and companies keep choosing those funds in hopes that they'll beat the market.
  • Bitcoin is all about hodl. there's zero reason to end your position.

  • Oops

    How else will Russia and North Korea finance operations?

    • A near-anonymous frictionless [wikipedia.org] currency is ideal for pariah states wishing to bring money into Europe/USA/Canada. Crime syndicates can park illegal assets in as an alternative to money-laundering -- which is around a trillion dollar per year industry internationally [europa.eu].

      Russia is both of these.

  • by ameyer17 ( 935373 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @12:49PM (#58478258) Homepage

    (Billionaire does something dumb and loses large amount of money but is still a billionaire)

    Am I supposed to feel sorry for him? As someone living more or less paycheck to paycheck I don't.

    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      Rich person makes bad investment, loses money. Film at eleven.

      () --- the amount of non-whitespace between the parens shows how much I care and sympathize.

    • You're supposed to feel relatively more important because of his loss, even though to him they're probably just small numbers.

      Nobody rocks a pink tie like Masayoshi Son; don't expect him to have experienced undignified emotions merely from the loss of a hundred million dollars.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    ...you don't need to gamble in Vegas or gamble on Bitcoin. You're done. Enjoy life and move on.

  • I wonder how much bitcoin is "lost" due to people losing wallet passwords.

  • by tempo36 ( 2382592 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @03:04PM (#58478954)

    I don't think "huge personal bet" really applies here. My quick wiki search says that Mr Son is worth ~$24B which means his $150M bet represented 0.6% of his worth.

    For reference, this is the same percentage as a person worth $1M spending $6,250. I'm pretty confident Mr Son made this loss back within 1-2 months in interest or dividends alone.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    ...and that was about the same percentage as Billionaire Son's loss.

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