Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Should young people invest in crypto?

- By Rivan V. Stinson Rivan V. Stinson is a staff writer for Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine. For more on this and similar money topics, visit Kiplinger.com.

Social media and crypto talk go hand in hand for millennial­s. If you spend a lot of time online, you’ll see that investing in bitcoin, dogecoin and other coins is in vogue.

According to a survey from NORC, a research arm of the University of Chicago, more than one in 10 Americans invest in cryptocurr­encies. Crypto investors tend to be younger (38 years old, on average) and more diverse than traditiona­l stock investors, and 61% started their crypto journey in the past 12 months. Of those who are still hesitant to dive in, 31% say they don’t know where to start.

Anyone who thinks they’ve missed the boat needs to get one thing straight: You absolutely have not, says Isaiah Douglass, a millennial and certified financial planner at Vincere Wealth in Indianapol­is, who invests in bitcoin. Bitcoin is a small piece of the global investing pie in terms of market value compared with heavy hitters in the S&P 500 index. As of late August, bitcoin is collective­ly worth more than $900 billion; Apple, the biggest stock in the S&P 500, is worth $2.5 trillion. Bitcoin still has room to grow.

Bitcoin “isn’t a fad,” Douglass says. He notes that there are bitcoin advocates in Congress, and that El Salvador recently adopted bitcoin as a form of legal tender. “But the price hasn’t followed the positive momentum,” he says. Young people who put some of their savings into bitcoin over time will be ahead of the “big money” investors who Douglass believes will follow over the decade.

Douglass says his clients who invest in bitcoin have a conviction that blockchain — the technology tracking crypto transactio­ns across a network of computers — is revolution­ary. But they’re not investing money they can’t afford to lose, and their holdings are small, accounting for 1% to 5% of their overall portfolio. Successful investors in bitcoin and other coins also employ a dollar-cost-averaging strategy, meaning you invest your money in regular, equal portions over time.

Before you put any money into cryptocurr­encies, establish a core portfolio in line with your investing goals. If you’re a young profession­al, that core will likely be funds in your employer-sponsored 401(k), or a traditiona­l or Roth IRA. Next, choose how to invest. Most big brokerage firms don’t allow account holders to trade cryptocurr­encies directly. But you can invest in Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (symbol GBTC), an investment fund that holds bitcoin tokens.

Another option is to go the fintech route. Financial firm SoFi and broker Robinhood allow account holders to buy and sell various cryptocurr­encies through their smartphone apps. The risk: Your crypto funds aren’t insured by the FDIC or SIPC; if the institutio­n goes under, your funds are gone for good.

Or open an account at one of the cryptocurr­ency exchanges. Coinbase is the biggest, but Swan Bitcoin boasts lower fees. Digital assets at both firms aren’t covered by any kind of insurance, but U.S. dollars in the accounts are FDIC insured, up to $250,000.

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