Billionaire Tim Draper Stands By Bullish $250,000 Bitcoin Price Target For 2022

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Tech billionaire Tim Draper stands by his bitcoin price target of $250,000 for 2022. Despite the recent slump, Draper remains undeterred in his enthusiastic outlook for the largest virtual currency by market cap.

“This is going to be so big, so if you see a dip [in prices], jump in,” Draper told TheStreet at the 2018 Crypto Finance Conference in Switzerland. “Maybe it will dip further, but boy, I made that prediction and I’m sticking to it. $250,000 by 2022 for bitcoin.”

After a massive spike in 2017, BTC prices tumbled 50 percent in 2018. Despite the recent bear market, crypto’s profile has never been higher, and the industry continues to expand.

In April 2018, Draper generated countless headlines after boldly predicting that bitcoin would soar to $250,000 by 2022, as CCN has reported. And nothing has happened to change his outlook.

“They’re going to think you’re crazy, but believe it,” he said. “It’s happening and it’s going to be awesome!”

Draper has an impressive track record with predicting bitcoin price movements, so it’s hard to dismiss any forecast he makes. In 2015, the venture capitalist accurately predicted that bitcoin would top $10,000 by the end of 2017. BTC soared above $13,000 on December 31, 2017.

https://twitter.com/RealTimeCrypto/status/984793581734031360

Four years ago, Draper invested $250,000 in bitcoin when its price hovered at around $6. He lost it all when Mt. Gox collapsed in February 2014.

“We were going to have this new kind of currency and it was going to be awesome and I thought [Mt. Gox’s collapse] was the end of it,” Draper recalled. “But bitcoin only dropped about 10% or 15% that day on news that basically the biggest exchange just stole a whole bunch of money. Then I thought: ‘Wait a second. People really need this. This is really important.’ So I started buying a little bit at a time.”

Draper became a bitcoin whale in late-2014, when he purchased 40,000 bitcoins at a federal auction for $600 apiece. At the time, the U.S. Marshals had seized 144,336 bitcoins from the operators of the Silk Road drug marketplace. Draper said they were auctioning off nine lots, and most of the bidders were venture capitalists like him.

“Here was my thinking,” Draper recounted. “Either this thing goes to nothing and — you know, too bad — or it goes sky-high and nobody’s going to care that I paid 5% more for it. So I bid up to $632 and I didn’t just get one lot. I got all the lots.”

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