| > Became paper richer, which is really quite different I hear this all the time but I don't understand it. The Ripple guy's wealth isn't made of paper, it's an electronic ledger. And if he trades his Ripples for dollars or euros, that wealth just moves to a bank's electronic ledger. If he uses his dollars or euros to buy shares in Google or government bonds, the wealth moves to a broker's electronic ledger. Then he sells his securities to buy real estate, and now his wealth is in an electronic ledger of property titles. So in what way is cryptocurrency wealth "only paper wealth" but other wealth is somehow more substantial than "paper"? |
It's a colloquialism. A lot of Zuckerberg's wealth is "paper" wealth as well.
I think there are two things here that make people dismiss crypto wealth so easily.
1) The first is perhaps a little unfair, but in some ways justified: crypto wealth isn't actually founded on anything. Say what you want about Facebook, but even the most cynical of folks have to admit that it's built on a ton of economic activity, and we can predict at least some amount of stability in Facebook's share price going forward for some amount of time. With Ripple, it's anybody's guess. Ripple guy's net worth in terms of dollars could double, or halve, or sink to near-nothing in a matter of days or weeks, and none of those outcomes would be particularly surprising.
2) The other thing is liquidity. Zuck certainly can't dump all his shares of FB and expect the price not to tank. But a decent chunk of his net worth isn't tied up in FB anymore, and he can likely liquidate a lot of that fairly quickly. The Ripple guy presumably is an otherwise "normal" person who has 99.999999% of his net worth tied up in Ripple. Liquidating even a relatively small fraction of that would crash the price of Ripple, so in real terms, the Ripple guy doesn't have access to that money. Also, all (or nearly all) of Zuck's wealth exists in mature financial markets with clear rules and regulations and predictable expectations. The Ripple guy's net worth exists in something that is basically the opposite of that.
As an aside, I'm not the parent poster, but I think dismissing it as "paper wealth" isn't really getting across what he probably actually means. Even if Zuck's wealth was all "paper wealth" as well (in that hypothetically let's say nearly all his net worth was tied up in shares of FB, and that liquidity there was difficult), I'd still give more credence to Zuck's wealth due to #1.