2/ According to @Gemini’s report about 14% of US citizens own crypto.
This is about 21.2 million US adults.
3/ While just 26% of current crypto holders are women, women account for more than half (53%) of those interested in getting into crypto soon.
There is an opportunity here and the industry should be paying attention.
4/ Based on the percentage of respondents in the @Gemini report, they estimate that 19.3 million U.S. adults will be entering the crypto market in the next 12 months.
Women are best positioned as the next demographic to come into this asset class.
5/ Education remains critical.
Bitcoin is almost synonymous with crypto, but few have heard of other coins.
The vast majority of owners or crypto-curious (95%) have heard of bitcoin, while little more than one-third have heard of Ethereum.
6/ More than two-thirds of U.S. adults (77%) indicate they are open to learning more about digital assets, whether they already own cryptocurrency or not.
Check out #cryptopedia if you’re one of those folks who wants to learn more:
But it has still outperformed gold by 66x and the S&P 500 by 11x over the last decade.
IMHO - Bitcoin is the world’s best savings technology.
Here's a thread on how to keep more of it. 👇👇👇
2/ First, look at what investors call CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate). It's a way to break down growth across assets, on the same time frame, and compare them.
Over the past decade, Bitcoin's is 132%.
Gold's is 2%. The S&P 500's is 12% (h/t @case4bitcoin)
3/ A 132% CAGR means that your money has more than doubled every year over the past decade 🤯
- Go to eatbitcoinpizza.com
- Order pizza
- Local shop makes pizza
- Pizza delivered in Bitcoin Pizza box
- Profits from pilot donated to @HRF's Bitcoin Development Fund
Buy pizza. Promote bitcoin. Help small business. Build bitcoin. Everyone wins.
The Human Rights Foundation's Bitcoin Development Fund was a no brainer partner for us on this.
They are doing amazing work to help support the people who work tirelessly every day to make sure that bitcoin continues global ascension to mass adoption.
"Recent research also shows that prices have risen more quickly for people at the bottom of the income distribution than for those at the top — a phenomenon dubbed “inflation inequality.”"