I remember this thread in 2017 in the French part.
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2425439.0At the time OP wanted to borrow to buy BTC. As we know today, he would have made a great deal (plus, a rare thing at the time, his banker was OK to lend him the money).
Yet almost everyone advised him against it. Why was that?
It seems to me that all investments involve risk. What makes borrowing to invest in BTC any more risky than investing in a start-up, opening a business or buying a house (which may be full of defects, for example)? If the person's financial situation is stable and the banker, after studying the file in depth, is OK, I don't see why you can't borrow money to buy BTC. In fact, this is what some large companies do.
Obviously, this is a huge risk. This can be illustrated by recent market events, when Trump announced tariffs, then there was a rumor about the alleged postponement, then a denial of this, then Trump himself announced the postponement of tariffs, and before that he wrote a post with the meaning "buy."
Imagine a person who bought bitcoin with borrowed money before the tariffs were announced. Maybe bitcoin will grow to its previous values by the time the loan is repaid, or maybe not. Then the consequences for the borrower will be dire.