How to Profit from the Trump Crypto Wave
Wade Slome, CFA, CFP?
President/Founder, Sidoxia Capital Management, LLC; Author
We were honored to have our white paper on the cryptocurrency market published by the California Business Journal last month. Please enjoy the article below.
Newly inaugurated President Donald Trump has wholeheartedly embraced the multi-trillion dollar cryptocurrency and digital asset industry. This is a seismic shift from the anti-crypto stance harbored by the previous administration. In the first week of his second term, President Trump not only appointed crypto-friendly Paul Atkins as the SEC Chairman, but Trump also named David Sacks as the first-ever White House Crypto Czar. If that was not a strong enough signal, Trump issued an executive order on his third day in the Oval Office, entitled, “Strengthening American Leadership in Digital Financial Technology.”
With this massive political and legislative tailwind behind the cryptocurrency industry, what is the best way to profit from this cryptocurrency wave? Is it just as easy as buying Bitcoin? Not exactly, if history repeats itself. Since Bitcoin was introduced in early 2009, the value of the cryptocurrency has fallen by more than -50% seven times. There have been many causes for Bitcoin’s historical volatility, including the hacking of the largest Bitcoin exchange in 2011 (Mt. Gox); China banning Bitcoin in 2013; and the COVID pandemic crash in 2020. Matters got worse for the cryptocurrency industry when FTX, one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges went bankrupt in 2022, and its founder and CEO, Sam Bankman-Fried, was subsequently arrested and convicted for fraud and money laundering.
Investing in a currency or asset class with that much volatility is very challenging. To compensate for volatility and risk, investors require the potential for higher returns backed by robust fundamentals. Unfortunately, to date, many of the broadest use cases for cryptocurrencies have been limited to illicit and illegal activities. There certainly are some speed and security advantages to the blockchain technology and the associated ledger structure of the major cryptocurrencies. However, the benefits have not been so clear-cut that Fortune 1000 companies and mass consumers have adopted it. A relatively small 15.5% of Americans (and 6.9% worldwide) are estimated to own a cryptocurrency, and a smaller fraction of that actually transact in a crypto.
Even though the practical use cases for cryptocurrencies over the last two decades have been extremely constrained, the speculative fervor surrounding this asset class has grown exponentially to the point there are over an estimated 10,000 cryptocurrencies that exist today, including speculative meme coins such as Dogecoin, the Trump coin, and other crude joke coins.
In my more than three decades of investing, I have repeatedly encountered extensive segments of the financial markets that would qualify as speculative bubbles, whether it was subprime mortgages and credit default swaps (CDS) in the 2008 Financial Crisis, or dot-com companies in the 2000 bursting of the technology bubble.
Today, in 2025, the current cryptocurrency wave definitely qualifies as another bubble. But depending on an investor’s time horizon, there is still potential to make significant profits during these frothy investment waves. For example, take Amazon.com, which was at the epicenter of the dot-com bubble as it saw its stock price crater approximately -95% in the 2000-2001 timeframe. Before Amazon’s stock collapsed, its price peaked at $5.65 per share at the end of 1999 – today, the stock price in 2025 has exceeded $240 per share (a more than 40-fold increase). Despite the bursting of the tech bubble, a tremendous amount of money has been made by long-term investors in Amazon and a select few other long-term technology winners.
I believe the same opportunity exists today in the cryptocurrency market. There are a few historical parallels that inform our crypto investment strategy at my investment firm, Sidoxia Capital Management. Let’s begin with the gambling industry that flourished in Las Vegas during the 1940s after the end of Prohibition. It was not the gamblers and speculators that made all the money, but rather the casinos, including some remaining today like the Flamingo and the Golden Nugget.
Currently, the dominant casino in the cryptocurrency industry is Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN). Coinbase is the 800-pound gorilla in the U.S. cryptocurrency exchange space, handling transactions that total more than $4 billion in daily trading volume across hundreds of cryptocurrencies, stable coins, meme coins and other digital assets. And the company is highly profitable with substantial growth. More specifically, the company has generated more than $5 billion in sales and greater than $1 billion in profits over the last year. Just like Las Vegas casinos make money off every gambler’s bets, so too does Coinbase make profits off every crypto speculator’s trades, whether those transactions in Bitcoin, Tether, Ethereum, or meme coins go up or down in value.
Another lucrative way for investors to look at the nascent cryptocurrency industry is to compare it to the California gold rush that occurred from 1848 – 1855. Hundreds of thousands of “forty-niners” (the peak year of gold rush immigration – 1849) flocked out west in hopes of discovering perceived limitless riches – an attitude held by many cryptocurrency purchasers presently. Unfortunately, it was not the forty-niners digging and panning for gold who made most of the money, it was the merchants selling all the picks and shovels to the gold rush speculators that profited the greatest.
The contemporary merchants in today’s cryptocurrency world are companies like NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA), the creator of the graphics processing unit (GPU) semiconductors that power the critical mining operations of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. The GPUs serve as the picks and shovels for crypto miners who receive rewards in the form of cryptocurrencies (i.e., Bitcoin) in return for performing computationally intensive calculations, which are necessary to verify transactions on a digital decentralized crypto ledger. NVIDIA GPUs have a broad range of applications beyond crypto mining, including data center applications for artificial intelligence (AI), video games, gene sequencing, virtual-augmented reality, and other large-scale markets. Over the last year, NVIDIA has produced more than $110 billion in sales and created more than $60 billion in net profits. Not only was NVDIA successful commercially, but equity investors were also rewarded handsomely last year with an appreciation of +171% in the share price.
There are plenty of reasons to remain skeptical about the euphoria surrounding the cryptocurrency industry, especially due to the lack of legitimate use cases across the avalanche of digital assets endlessly introduced. However, the pro-crypto wave of Trump regulations and policies allow plenty of ways for investors to profit from this digital gold rush, especially if you can find the winning crypto casino and leading merchant of digital picks and shovels.
By Wade W. Slome, CFA, CFP?, Exclusive to?California Business Journal
DISCLOSURE:?Sidoxia Capital Management (SCM) and some of its clients hold positions in NVDA, COIN, IBIT, and certain exchange traded funds (ETFs), but at the time of publishing had no direct position in any other security referenced in this article. No information accessed through the Investing Caffeine (IC) website constitutes investment, financial, legal, tax or other advice nor is to be relied on in making an investment or other decision. Please read disclosure language on IC?Contact page.