Not financial advice, but these are the things I'm investing in in 2025.
In random order.
- Bitcoin
No brainer. I don't want to share my ultimate goal, because that would automatically tell you how much BTC I hold, but I want to accrue as much as I can for the next 30 years.
- Sui
When I signed up for last year's Sui Basecamp, I'd barely heard of Sui, and I didn't hold any. So I bought some. The thing is, Sui has been on the rise, and every metric in the book says Sui has a lot of room to grow.
By the way, I'm going to to Sui Basecamp again this year, it's in Dubai, 'holla at me' if you're about.
- Gold
All things being equal, the price of everything is always going up. And gold will continue to go up accordingly. Gold sets a new ATH nearly weekly, so there's no logical reason to stop buying it, tbh.
- Tesla and Nvidia
I'm buying Tesla and Nvidia for the same reason: car autonomy.
Until not long ago, I thought self-driving cars were a fad, but I did a complete 180 on it because it's clear they aren't. Musk said, "don't buy Tesla stock if you think we can't solve autonomy". I think they can. So I'm buying.
For the same reason, I'm buying Nvidia, because Nvidia makes hardware required for self-driving cars.
Also, self-driving cars are, in my opinion, the truly ground-breaking and game-changing use case for AI.
- Apple
Apple is the leading name in the smartphone industry and it'll continue to be in the foreseeable future.
I think people often misinterpret the reason why people buy Apple. Sure, status and money and style and marketing, whatever. It all plays a key role.
But the main reason is the ecosystem, couple with Apple's real-world usability.
I'm writing this on my MacBook Air M1, a relatively basic model, with 37 (literally, I counted them) open tabs on Brave and four open tabs on Safari, and it's absolutely seamless and fast. A Windows notebook would be exploding under the same conditions.
And there's more. I'm writing this while listening to music with my AirPods, and if I get a call on my iPhone, my AirPods would automatically switch to iPhone, and then back to MacBook.
It's seamless, fast, smooth, reliable.
No one else can do that.
So next time you hear somebody say "Apple is not innovating anymore" or "Apple is no longer superior in terms of hardware", tell them, "maybe, but that's not the point".