Post
Topic
Board Economics
Re: Reality of investments on practice
by
TopT3ns
on 03/07/2025, 18:04:47 UTC
I think this approach is not bad, it all depends on what income is in your country. Firstly, in the country where I live, banks cannot provide such interest rates when investing in dollars. 0.6*12 is 7.2 per year, and this is taking into account that this investment is not in some country with a weak economy, where inflation is 30 percent per year. The main question is where to get 100,000 dollars, because this is even problematic for the CIS countries, not to mention African ones.
I know 7.2% per year in usd is quite high for traditional banks but you can find even better rates than that using defi
15% apy is common and sometimes even higher like 30% if you go the stablecoin pools route

of course this comes with a risk but maybe with these new bank apps we will see slightly better options being offered for non technical costumers.
You seem to have forgotten the risk involved in centralised platforms where those investments with huge Apy are done, if you consider the risk, you will rather go with traditional investment. Remember that no platform have been able to create crypto insurance so putting money in these platform is more or less exposing 100% of your money to risk. This is not the case with banks that are backed my insurance.
I know why you are worried about the security of centralized investment platforms, particularly, when the prospect of great returns is overestimated. I do believe though that we must make the difference between legitimate fear and super defensive. It is never risk free, whether in the crypto or traditional banking. Is it really worth not taking any action at all because we do not have crypto insurance? Then we will never be able to move forward. What matters, I think, is not avoiding the risk but, to the extent that we can measure and control.

Not all but certain quantity of portfolio in this sector can be utilized. It is not recklessness that compels us to do this, but we know that the world is changing. Banks can deliver security, yet most of them are associated with almost immobile asset growth. We tend to reject any types of innovation due to the fact that this is not a sure bet and we may end up trapped in this sense of comfort zone. And I believe that a comfort zone is not always a safe one in a long term perspective. Unless we put all our eggs in the same basket, then many things are nonetheless there to be explored and we committedly remain in control.