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Billionaire calls bitcoin an easy target for confiscation

Billionaire Calls Bitcoin an Easy Target for Confiscation

Giustra says bitcoin is easier to confiscate than gold, undermining its haven claims.

Canadian billionaire Frank Giustra questioned the first cryptocurrency’s status as a haven. He argued the coin is far easier to confiscate than precious metals, making digital-asset investing risky.

“Look at the much-hyped government bitcoin reserve — it consists entirely of seized coins. That alone should give investors pause. Transactions are easy to trace, and when governments are desperate, they choose the path of least resistance,” the businessman wrote.

Shifting narratives and a critique of FOMO

The billionaire recalled a debate with the founder of Strategy Michael Saylor five years ago. Giustra stressed that his criticism is aimed not at the technology but at the promotion of the asset, built on greed and FOMO.

The investor pointed to the constant shifting narratives around the first cryptocurrency due to an “identity crisis”:

  • means of payment: the idea faltered amid rising fees and low speed;
  • hedge: during the inflation spike the price fell from $69,000 to $16,000;
  • digital gold: Giustra considers this claim refuted by current market conditions.

“Today is a perfect example of why bitcoin is not gold. Amid uncertainty around Greenland, the metal jumped sharply while the cryptocurrency fell by the same percentage. One asset is a ‘safe haven’, the other is a risk-on instrument,” he noted in a discussion with a user called Lucas.

Grievances with bitcoin maximalists

Separately, Giustra published an article detailing risks for “unsophisticated investors”. He condemned Saylor’s calls to mortgage real estate to buy crypto, calling it a recipe for financial ruin.

The billionaire also pointed to market-structure issues:

  • inflows into spot ETF have slowed;
  • shares of DAT companies, including Strategy, trade below net asset value;
  • high leverage at such firms raises the risk of cascading sell-offs.

“It looks like a game of musical chairs among big buyers. Every rich person is glancing around nervously, guessing who will exit first, before the music stops,” Giustra added.

Solidarity among ‘gold bugs’

The billionaire’s position echoes that of gold advocate Peter Schiff. The economist said bitcoin’s inability to rise alongside precious metals undermines its reputation.

Schiff warned of a likely plunge in the digital asset’s price due to speculators’ disappointment.

Market participants also expressed concern over Saylor’s silence. After hinting at coin purchases on January 18, he stopped posting updates on the topic, which investors took as a troubling signal.

Earlier, ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood said that mathematically limited issuance makes the first cryptocurrency a more perfect scarce asset than gold.

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