@DrStrange My personal investment strategy has been to be irresponsibly long the orange coin for a very long time. Occasionally I've sold to buy real estate, which has almost always been a disaster. Worse has been spending on frivolous non-investment goods, but alas! This is balanced by my wife's entirely conventional career and investments.
I don't recommend folks buy bitcoin anymore, only that they learn about it if they're interested. And I certainly don't try to use my portfolio as evidence in favor of people buying the coin. I'd rather have people complain about me being lucky than complaining that I suckered them into a terrible investment, both of which will be the case with such a volatile thing.
My long rant about US Equities being the default sponge for one's excess cash isn't meant to be anti-mature-stocks, but rather to help people think more broadly. I've got some friends who are hardcore FIRE guys and we have a good time ribbing each other as we trade off outperforming each other every other year (they've done extremely well just shoving all their cash into index funds and I'm happy for them!)
I also want to be careful not to be a doomer, always predicting a big crash or generally being sour on markets. I lean towards being very bullish America in the longer run but have found something I like even more for the time being. I do think bitcoin as an alternative is a potentially good diversifier to combine with index funds, almost like adding farmland (if you can find an investable vehicle) or an allocation into VC or other early stage products.
To me it means the profits ultimately flow into America, and the bulk of the jobs. If Google, Facebook, Netflix, etc... were all based in Spain or China, we'd have a huge net outflow of dollars into those countries. But having them based here leads to the money flowing into America. A simpler example is US oil/fracking companies who are of course selling energy products into a global commodity market, but having them based in America means a great deal of money comes in. Consider Germany's reliance on Russian natural gas.
Big fan of Dalio, for folks new to him this is a good intro to his views on economics:
This looks to me like a classic "it keeps going up, so it'll keep going up, get in now for guaranteed returns!" I certainly believe that this is in fact the case, perhaps for the last 20 years, and perhaps it'll keep up for another decade or two. But I'm guessing it's an increasing problem for the non-owners of Iceland. Compare Tokyo to San Francisco... one grows supply with demand and housing is affordable, while the other largely prevents new supply and housing prices go skyward (SF Bay Area being essentially paradise on Earth, geography-wise). If Iceland's population is growing fast, and new housing is allowed to be built fairly freely, then this probably won't be too problematic long term
One day I might own some investment real estate again. My direct experience has been to get a bit over my skis, then the 2020 riots in Minneapolis happened and the area of my property went from highly desirable to pretty meh, and the city's financial management seems to get worse and worse so property taxes were going up ~10% per year... killer! Hyperlocal example of course, and I learned a lot from the experience. I lost 100% of my equity, and the person who bought the property from me at a much lower price than I paid has since let it fall into foreclosure (even after doing some decent renovations). Rough!