In July 2010, you could buy a Bitcoin for AU$1.05.
As of the 15th of December 2017, you could sell a Bitcoin for over AUS$24,850.
The clever people who took a gamble on the cryptocurrency – which, in the simplest of terms, looks to cut through foreign currencies and banks to provide a global money system without transaction fees or exchange rates – won big. The people who invested in Bitcoin in its infancy and early years are now sitting on a goldmine. A very confusing, tech-jargon-y, penis-y goldmine.
Yes. Penis-y.
Apologies for that term, but it’s true. It’s reported around 95 per cent of the people who invested in Bitcoin at the most lucrative times were men.
In 2013, Zero Hedge reported: “The ‘average Bitcoin user’ is male (96%), 32.7 years old, libertarian/anarcho-capitalist (37%), non-religious (61%), with a full time job (43%), and is in a relationship (56%).”
See? Very penis-y.
This shouldn’t exactly shock us – women’s resistance to invest money compared to men is well documented – but when you see it laid out so brutally, it stings. It feels like we’re failing. Probably because we are.
On the whole, as women, we are being meek and scared with our money. We’re not being brave enough to take the gambles – educated gambles – our male counterparts make, and in the end we are losing.
In January, money expert Sallie Krawcheck wrote for Bumble: