Specifically, a survey of 65 of the world’s wealthiest people has found that almost 30% of them have either direct or indirect investments in crypto, “a rate that is higher than among non-billionaire investors,” the Forbes magazine stated in a report from June 8. According to the findings, about 18% of the surveyed billionaires have at least 1% of their wealth in crypto. Most of the survey participants in this group are investing only as a small side experiment. Indeed, 80% have said that they had much less than one-tenth of their fortune invested in crypto, while 3.2% said they had more than half of their wealth in it. Furthermore, an additional 10% of respondents said they were not directly involved with crypto investing but had backed crypto-oriented companies. Some of the billionaires interviewed in the survey include Sam Bankman-Fried, the co-founder and CEO of crypto exchange FTX, who told Forbes he held between 76% and 100% of his $20.6 billion net worth in crypto. Bankman-Fried is one of the billionaires that belong to both groups, as he invests in crypto directly and supports crypto-focused firms.
Not all billionaires believe in crypto
That said, some billionaires are not yet sold on crypto, including Berkshire Hathaway’s (NYSE: BRK.A) CEO Warren Buffett – well-known for his opinion of Bitcoin as ‘rat poison’, JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon, as well as Blackrock’s Larry Fink. As Finbold reported in early April, these three were criticized by Anthony Scaramucci, the founder and managing partner at investment firm SkyBridge Capital and former advisor to Donald Trump, as not having done their homework on crypto. In his opinion, Paul Tudor-Jones, Steve Cohen, Dan Loeb, and Stan Druckenmiller, are examples of people who have done ‘their homework’ and jumped on the crypto bandwagon after doing sufficient research into these assets.