Warn Your Clients Against Buying Dogecoin


What You Need to Know

  • Dogecoin doesn’t have its own blockchain, mining network or development activity.
  • It was intended to be a joke, not a legitimate digital asset.
  • Dogecoin is a distraction from serious efforts to legitimize cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum.

Blockchain and digital assets, which have already entered the mainstream, continue to gain momentum.

Naysayers look increasingly foolish with their wave-of-the-hand dismissiveness (“It’s just a fraud!,” “It’s just a fad!”) and name-calling (“It’s rat poison squared!”) as investors demand better reasons to reject the legitimate and undeniable investment thesis these revolutionary technologies offer.

Blockchain and digital assets offer commercial benefits and value to virtually every business sector on the planet. That’s why 100 million people worldwide own Bitcoin, including 17% of Americans.

It’s also why corporations, pension funds, university endowments, fund managers and billionaires own Bitcoin, and why analysts from Citibank, Tiburon Strategic Advisors, Guggenheim, Ark Invest, Stanford and others all predict 5x to 10x price increases.

It’s Not Just About Bitcoin

And of course, it’s not just about Bitcoin. It can be argued that Ethereum is even more important (and exciting), along with decentralized finance, or DeFi (such as UniSwap), central bank digital currencies, stablecoins (Diem) and non-fungible tokens, or NFTs — lots of jargon for sure, and all illustrating that if you don’t know what I’m talking about, it’s time you learned — for your sake and that of your clients.

Now, in the midst of all this, comes Dogecoin.

Back in 2013, after Bitcoin began to catch attention, two software engineers from IBM and Adobe created Dogecoin as a joke, satirizing Bitcoin’s rapid growth and appreciation.

As part of the prank, Dogecoin was used to raise money for the Jamaican Bobsled Team. Even the name was a gag: the misspelling of doggy, leading to many mispronunciations of the name.

Dogecoin is not, and was never intended to be, a legitimate digital asset. Dogecoin doesn’t have its own blockchain, mining network or development activity.

Bitcoin has 500,000 times the computing power, and Bitcoin is scarce (only 21 million coins will ever be created), while Dogecoin’s supply is unlimited. (There are already 113 billion Dogecoin in circulation and 14 million more are minted every day.) Scarcity allows Bitcoin’s price to rise, while Dogecoin’s abundance makes its price far riskier.



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