FUD: How Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt Hold Crypto Investors Back

FUD

What does FUD mean?

FUD is an acronym for fear, uncertainty and doubt. While it is wise to approach any potential investment with great care, in crypto the term FUD is typically applied to fears, uncertainties and doubts that are unwarranted. FUD can be eliminated by greater research and understanding – or a bolder mindset.

What Is FUD?

PessimismIt’s an important belief from a survival standpoint. Not wanting to trek through a jungle because you believe you’ll get bitten to death by spiders may deprive you of a riveting adventure, but at the very least you’ll enjoy an existence that is uninterrupted by spider bites.

But pessimism, when exercised too generously, can be an impediment to the investor. If fear, uncertainty or doubt (FUD) dissuaded you from buying Bitcoin in 2015, then needless to say you missed out. Take this opportunity to kick yourself.

Yet FUD is still common in the crypto world. Compared to fear of missing out (FOMO), which prevails when the market is hotter than a cheap cigarette lighter, FUD tends to color the public mindset when the market is dropping or stagnant. This is why FUD is bad: It dissuades investors from buying crypto at lower prices – just like FOMO spurs them to buy when prices are at their peak!

What Is FUD in Crypto?

FUD takes two common forms in crypto. The first is when speculation surrounding a coin or token becomes increasingly negative – so much so that it may actually drive the value of that asset downward.

Such negative speculation may be wholly organic, although it is not unheard of for certain actors to spread FUD as part of a strategy to drive that asset’s price down for their own benefit.

Just like political actors will don sock puppet accounts to flood online forums with information that supports their agenda, so too will opportunists try to influence perception of a coin or token in their favor.

But what is the energy of misinformation? Actual information. Thus the cure for FUD is DYOR – “do your own research.”

The second great source of FUD in the crypto world is the negative attitude toward crypto itself. The future of currency is often dismissed as high-falutin zoomer hokum bokum by many people who are branded as “in the know,” including Warren Buffet and Jack Bogle.

Of course, official attitudes may also fuel FUD. Take China’s ban on crypto, for example. It wasn’t the product of the Chinese government’s compulsive need to protect its citizens. It was spurred by the government’s desire to secure its party members’ control over the economy. Yet authoritarian measures such as these often create plenty of FUD among investors who worry that crypto is destined to become a flash in the pan.

Conclusion

While we would never advise against caution, it is important to remember that there is such a thing as too much caution. Fear, uncertainty and doubt may save you from losing your shirt, but FUD, when exercised in excess, will also prevent you from making any money – the most regrettable state of affairs imaginable.

FUD: How Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt Hold Crypto Investors Back originally appeared at Libertas Bella.

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Author: Libertas Bella

Libertas Bella. It’s Latin for “beautiful liberty." We chose the name for a few reasons, one of them being that we cherish liberty whether it’s our own or anyone else’s. Libertas Bella has been featured on FEE.org, LewRockwell.com, Activist Post, PJ Media, and ZeroHedge.

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10 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
September 12, 2022 10:16 pm

syn·chro·nic·i·ty
[ˌsiNGkrəˈnisədē]
NOUN
the simultaneous occurrence of events which appear significantly related but have no discernible causal connection:
“such synchronicity is quite staggering”

ALL the Rage. For a Minute. ENDless loops of ‘newspersons’, 🤮 In nearly perfect unison, cadence of ‘presentation’. Saying the EXACT same thing, Verbatim.

So. APPARENTLY this week across the vastness of the WEB? Bitcoin & Clones.

SURE It’s Mere Coincidence. The ODDS? That The SAME Entities being RESPONSIBLE fo BOTH ‘Phenomona’?

ASTRO, (The Dog From The Jetsons) ‘NOMICAL’

JimN
JimN
September 12, 2022 10:52 pm

A cheap rationalization for putting your risk money a work without a rational basis.

bigfoot
bigfoot
  JimN
September 13, 2022 12:01 am

I’m thinking that your own reasoning is cheap and limited. From my view the “rational basis” for risking money is self-evident to a great many smart people, but not to you to which fact you wrongly generalize as the fault of people who don’t see the world as you do. A blind person would be a fool to call a seeing person inept because his description of the sun differs from one with limited perception. You may feel the warmth and conclude the fire goes out during sleepy time.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 13, 2022 12:08 am

I didn’t buy buttcoin in 2010 so fuck this shit
No crypto no digital no nothing
Grow your own

m
m
September 13, 2022 2:40 am

Didn’t the article forget to mention FOMO, in the context of Tulipcoins?

(*Fear of Missing Out)

Swrichmond
Swrichmond
September 13, 2022 6:17 am

FEAR – I am 99% certain it’s a scam, or worse it’s an acceptance vanguard for CBDC’s, and that makes me afraid.

Uncertainty – am I 99% certain it’s a scam, or only 98%?

Doubt – I doubt the intellect of people who buy into the scam, and I doubt the motives of the pumpers who regularly write these articles, which appear much more frequently now that “digital currencies” have melted down.

Putin it where it counts
Putin it where it counts
September 13, 2022 8:14 am

Crypto is a scam

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Putin it where it counts
September 13, 2022 9:21 am

It’s an e-currency backed by nothing but the confidence of “investors”. There are no credible employers compensating workers for their labor with this electronic credit, hence there’s no real acceptance of crypto as an exchange currency outside of the so-called “tech savvy” financial fringe.

It’s not physical money, it’s credit and should be treated as such.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
September 13, 2022 2:24 pm

Given the cost of energy at the moment, where can one mine crypto in W. Europe? Also, it looks like a lot of people in W. Europe will soon have to choose between electricity and food. How does crypto work in a world that is quickly returning to barter?

bigfoot
bigfoot
  NickelthroweR
September 13, 2022 5:50 pm

China, Iceland, Moscow, Washington State (hydro power), Switzerland, and The Netherlands.

The annual power used by crypto mining amounts to .55% percent of global use. Wow, what a problem!