[The Hustle]( Issue #153
[The Hustle, Sunday, April 4, 2021](
Sunday, April 4, 2021 Meet a guy who made millions on Bitcoin â then millions more on NFTs How an Australian college student turned ~$4k into a fortune by speculating on the blockchain boom. BY [Zachary Crockett]( In recent months, the internet has been rife with tales about young speculators making life-changing money on high-risk markets. These traders usually opt to stay anonymous, veiled behind alphanumeric wallet addresses, burner Reddit accounts, and cartoon avatars. But one successful crypto investor recently decided to share his story with The Hustle for the first time â and itâs a wild ride. Daniel Maegaard, 30, of Brisbane, Australia, made a fortune not once, but twice: First, by hedging bets on various cryptocurrencies from 2013-2017, then, more recently, by getting in early on the explosion of [non-fungible tokens (NFTs)](. Itâs a rare tale of how extreme risk-taking, timing, intuition, and a lot of luck resulted in a multi-million dollar payout. And it began just 8 years ago, with an investment of a few thousand dollars. The first fortune: Cryptocurrency In February of 2013, Maegaard â then a 22-year-old psychology student at Australiaâs University of Sunshine Coast â was procrastinating on an assignment and came across a BBC article about Bitcoin. Still relatively unknown to the general public at the time, the cryptocurrency had recently doubled from $15 to $30. Back then, Bitcoin only had a market cap of ~$1B â 1000x smaller than todayâs [$1T+]( total value. But it piqued Maegaardâs interest for several reasons: - He was certain that the coinâs scarcity would lead to an increase in price. (Only [21m Bitcoin]( will ever be released.)
- He believed in the underlying technology of the [blockchain]( â a distributed public ledger where every transaction could be verified.
- Heâd just read about the [financial crisis]( in Cyprus, where the government seized money from thousands of bank accounts, and he could sense a mounting distrust in traditional fiat systems. So, he decided to go all-in. [Daniel Maegaard] Daniel in Colombia in 2017 (Daniel Maegaard) Maegaard turned to [Bitcointalk](, a forum where a small but passionate group of early cryptocurrency enthusiasts talked shop. And after a few weeks of reading, he gained enough confidence to start investing his weekly paychecks from a part-time job stocking shelves at a gas station. In total, he spentt ~$4k on Bitcoin at ~$150 apiece. âEveryone thought I was crazy,â he says. âBut my philosophy was that this was the time for me to take risks â when I was young and didnât have responsibilities like a mortgage, kids, and bills to pay.â The gamble didnât take long to pay off. By the end of 2013, Bitcoin had [risen]( to ~$950 per coin, nearly 10x-ing Maegaardâs investment. As his profits rose, Maegaard watched other friends cash out and enjoy thousands in proceeds. But he had bigger plans. Throughout 2014 and 2015, he doubled down on [altcoins]( â smaller market-cap coins like Counterparty, Colored Coins, Xcoin (later Dash), and Ripple â that were experiencing even more dramatic volatility than Bitcoin, sometimes rocketing up or down by 50% in one day. Maegaard paid astute attention to trends, buzz on forums, and ebbs in the market. By trading [Bitcoin/alt-coin pairs]( (using Bitcoin to buy other coins in lieu of cash) he was able to âdouble-dipâ on profits. âBitcoin rose against the US dollar, and altcoins rose against Bitcoin,â he says. âEverything just compounded.â In particular, he bet heavily on [Ripple](, a coin he purchased in bulk at an average price of <$0.005. [ripple] Maegaard bet heavily on Ripple (XRP) â a coin founded in 2013 with the goal of simplifying financial transfers. He bought it for fractions of a penny and later sold it at a substantial profit. (Zachary Crockett / The Hustle) After graduating from college, Maegaard enrolled in law school. But as his holdings ballooned, he began to realize that cryptocurrency â not a 9-to-5 lifestyle â was his true passion. Much to the dismay of his attorney father, he dropped out and burrowed further into altcoins. âMy parents just didnât understand it,â says Maegaard. âTheyâd read about how crypto was used for money laundering and drugs, and they were worried I was making bad decisions.â By early 2017, Maegaardâs commitment began to pay off. Largely thanks to a [boom]( in Ripple, his net worth surpassed $1m for the first time. In May, he cashed out ~$600k and bought a house, then reinvested the other ~$400k back into crypto, anticipating another surge. His timing couldnât have been better. Between July and December, Bitcoin surged from [$2k to $18k]( â and many altcoins saw price jumps of 40%+. âRandom people, like my grandma, started calling me and asking me about Bitcoin,â Maegaard recalls. âIt was reaching a saturation point, and I knew it was time to exit.â Just before Bitcoin hit its peak, he cashed out, walking away with ~$10m. [btc price] Zachary Crockett / The Hustle A newly-minted millionaire, Maegaard decided to step away and see the world. For the next 18 months, he lived out of a suitcase, traveling to more than 40 countries. But hedonism soon lost its luster. âOne day I realized that it wasnât even fun anymore,â he says. âI was missing fulfillment in my life, a sense of purpose.â He reentered the cryptocurrency markets, putting vast sums of his net worth back into altcoins. This time, he wasnât so lucky. Prices tumbled as much as 99% on certain coins. The same types of bets that had made Maegaard wealthy were now losing him millions of dollars â and he saw, for the first time, the dark side of speculation. Cryptocurrency, he found, also just wasnât as exciting as it used to be. âThe market went through this gentrification,â he says. âIt just didnât feel like the neighborhood Iâd discovered in 2013. There were lots of new faces, lots of scams. It had lost a bit of the magic from the early days.â He missed the feeling of being a pioneer in a largely untapped market. So, he set out to find something new. The second fortune: NFTs Back in 2017, Maegaard had heard rumblings of a newfangled tech called non-fungible tokens (NFTs). NFTs, heâd learn, were lines of code on a blockchain that prove the authenticity of ownership of a digital asset â like a piece of artwork, an audio file, a video clip, or a plot of virtual land. âAt the time, I just thought of NFTs as a scam or money grab,â he says. But after his travels, he began to research NFTs more intensely and he developed the same conviction heâd felt with Bitcoin. [creation] Zachary Crockett / The Hustle Maegaardâs first plunge into the space was with [Axie Infinity]( â a virtual world game built on the Ethereum blockchain in which users can buy characters called Axies, along with plots of land and [items]( like plants, snowboards, and statues. At the time, users were buying Axies for around 1 ETH (~$200). Maegaard joined the platform and started snatching up the rarest ones for 80 ETH each. âEveryone was like who the hell is this guy?â he recalls. âIn reality, I had no idea what I was doing. I was just buying whatever looked cool.â But as an investor, he believed in the future of so-called â[play-to-earn](â activity, which allowed players to make money from in-game sales. And he was willing to bet on it. As the NFT space expanded into art and other collectibles, Maegaard broadened the scope of his purchases. In particular, he became obsessed with [CryptoPunks]( â a series of 10k pixelated character portraits, and one of the first NFTs on the Ethereum blockchain. âI noticed early on that they were becoming kind of an online flex,â he says. âPeople were changing their online avatars to punks. It was like the equivalent of showing off a Rolex or a Ferrari on Instagram, except you could verify, with certainty, that the person actually owned it.â CryptoPunks, he believed, would be a new kind of [Veblen good]( â a desirable asset that saw its demand increase with its price. And his philosophy was simple: If NFTs did turn out to be a bubble, only the first â and rarest â assets would continue to hold long-term value. [list of cryptopunks] The Hustle Starting in May of 2020, Maegaard embarked on a CryptoPunk spending spree, [shelling ou](t $1.5m+ for at least 22 of the collectibles. At one point, he accounted for 8 of the10 most expensive CryptoPunk sales on the market. âPeople thought I was an absolute madman,â he says. âI donât think a lot of people could understand how, or why, one of these would be worth thousands of dollars.â Once again, his investment turned out to be miraculously timed. In February and March of 2021, the market for NFTs exploded. Over 2 months, there were some [60 sales]( of CryptoPunks over $150k; 2 particularly rare punks fetched $7.5m+ each. Maegaard capitalized on the âFrothy marketâ by selling a few of his NFT assets for huge returns: - A [plot of virtual land]( for ~$1.5m
- A rare âalbinoâ CryptoPunk [(#6487]() for ~$1m
- A [portion of his other CryptoPunks]( for ~$800k One of his purchases â[CryptoPunk #8348](, an extremely rare â7-traitâ for which he paid 80 ETH (~$18k) â recently courted an offer of $4.2m from a group of investors, which he rejected. âI think it could be worth a lot more in the future,â he says. âPlus, itâs become a part of my persona.â [CryptoPunk] CryptoPunk #8348, which Maegaard purchased for $18k less than a year ago, has already received offers as high as $4.2m. He currently uses the punk as his avatar on Twitter. (Zachary Crockett / The Hustle) Over the past few months, heâs reinvested his profits back into NFTs, with a series of big buys: - $907k for a [Metarift]( GIF
- $650k for a [Hashmask]( collectible
- $250k for a [Hackatao]( art piece He estimates that he currently owns ~$12m worth of NFTs. And much like a physical art collector, heâs in it for the long-haul. âI think my 7-trait CryptoPunk could be a $100m asset someday,â he says. âRight now, people would call me a lunatic. But $60k for a Bitcoin seemed insane at one point, too.â The future Maegaard attributes his success to an ability to see value in â and take a âcalculated riskâ on â highly speculative emerging asset classes. Heâs also the first to admit that heâs benefitted from his share of luck and good timing. For every success story like his, there are [dozens]( of other [tales]( of people whoâve [lost everything]( on similar bets. But Maegaard is undeterred by the [Icarus paradox]( â the idea that the very risk-taking that led to his success could eventually lead to his downfall. Recently, he sold several commercial properties he owned and put 95% of his net worth back into crypto and NFTs. âI want to maximize my gains,â he says. âIt may all go to 0 tomorrow. But I think crypto and NFTs are here to stay â and Iâm willing to take the bet for a chance to level up.â Maegaard enjoying the view (Daniel Maegaard) Today, he runs a popular [Twitter account]( and has become an authority in the NFT community. A number of high-net-worth individuals have turned to him to help facilitate million-dollar trades. After harboring some initial doubt, Maegaardâs parents have since come around to his career path. It didnât hurt that he convinced his mother to put some savings in Ethereum last July â a move that made her a millionaire in her own right. âThe whole thing has been an absolutely wild ride,â he says. âI never wouldâve expected this when I put that first paycheck in at 22. Itâs turned my life completely upside down.â But Maegaard insists itâs about more than the money: Heâs in it for the thrill of being at the forefront of something new. âI love telling my friends and family about some new thing and getting a funny look,â he says. âAnd I love knowing that new thing could potentially disrupt the entire world.â Share & discuss this story on: [FACEBOOK](facebook.com/1440219672904565/posts/2826745054252013/) [OUR WEBSITE](
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