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Logan Paul just dropped $5.3M on a single Pokémon card. Sounds wild? Maybe. But it raises a real question: are collectibles the next frontier for serious investors?
The move sparked debate across social platforms—some call it a smart hedge against inflation, others see pure speculation. Here's the thing: whether it's rare cards, art, or digital assets, the underlying logic is similar. Limited supply, cultural significance, and speculation drive value.
For crypto natives familiar with NFTs and alternative assets, this isn't entirely foreign territory. The mechanics are comparable—scarcity, community demand, and price discovery through market demand.
But should you jump in? That depends. High-ticket collectibles require serious capital, market knowledge, and patience. They're not liquid like crypto. You can't trade a $5.3M Pokémon card as easily as you'd swap tokens on a DEX.
The real lesson: diversification matters. Whether you're holding Bitcoin, exploring DeFi, or betting on collectibles, spreading risk across different asset classes has always been the smarter play.
I'm not criticizing; operations like Logan Paul’s essentially treat illiquid assets as chips for speculation. Fragmentation has already been tried with NFTs, and the result?
The so-called diversified allocation sounds smart, but in reality, it just means "I don't know where it will fall." Objectively, the risk of coins that can be sold at any time and cards stuck in the trading market are fundamentally not comparable.