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Bitcoin
gamble: this 39-year old father of three sold everything
he had for bitcoin - now he lives on a campsite waiting
for the next boom - 11th October 2017







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"If
you never take a risk, life is boring.": Didi
Taihuttu. Photo: Facebook
by
Herwin Thole
Didi
Taihuttu believes in bitcoin, and in a big way.
The
39-year-old has put his house up for sale selling
it in part for bitcoin and now lives with his
family on a campsite near Venlo in The Netherlands.
All of his other items are for sale, too: the car,
the motorbike, electric bikes, the children's toys,
clothing, shoes.
With
the proceeds, Taihuttu buys bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies,
betting that it will make him rich.
"People
will say,'You're crazy'," Taihuttu told Business
Insider. "But we are an adventurous family and
are going to gamble for a moment to live minimalist
lives. If you never take a risk, life is boring."
Taihuttu
thinks digital coins such as bitcoin and the blockchain
technology behind it are transforming the role of
money and banks in society.
With
blockchain, no third party is required to approve
a payment a role currently performed by banks
and a network of computers keeps a record of
all transactions.
"The
Internet was a revolution for information. I think
that blockchain and cryptocurrency are revolutionising
the monetary system," says Taihuttu. "In
five years' time, everyone will say: 'We could have
seen it coming.' I am responding to this change now."
Travelling
the world for nine months
In
the summer of 2017 Taihuttu and his wife made the
radical decision to sell everything. The couple have
just returned from a nine month world trip through
Asia and Australia with their three daughters. The
Taihuttu's visits included Angkor Wat in Cambodia,
swimming with dolphins near Brisbane and relaxing
on the beach in Thailand.
Early
last year, Taihuttu's father, John, died from cancer
aged 61. A year before, it became clear that the former
professional football player was incurably ill.
"It
was a difficult period," says Taihuttu, who ran
his own company offering computer courses in Venlo
for 11 years. "I had had it. I sold my business
and we decided as a family to go travelling."
The
crypto-believers
During
that journey Taihuttu kept bumping into people who
were using digital coins. In Bali, he met a South
African exchange trader who resigned after 17 years
and went into crypto trading. And on the beach near
Noosa in Queensland he spoke to someone from Dubai
who was trading in bitcoin.
Taihuttu
kept in touch with them all. They maintain contact
through Skype, analyse the market daily and trade
cryptomints based on what they're seeing in the price
action.
"They
are people who have a lot of experience in trading,"
says Taihuttu. "That is what I am still lacking
a little."
Taihuttu
himself has been "in the coins", as he says
it, since 2010, when the currency was worth less than
one euro.
"I
am an entrepreneur, so when I first heard about bitcoin,
I said: let's do this."
Minting
bitcoin with dozens of computers
Along
with a friend, Taihuttu set up a physical business
to mint bitcoin after buying dozens of computers and
video cards. When the value rose to several hundred
euros in 2013, he decided to sell the coins. The entire
stock.
"If
I had known then that four years later it would have
been ten times more valuable, then of course I wouldn't
have sold everything," says Taihuttu now. "But
then I thought: I have to make a profit."
It
wasn't too much later when the value of bitcoin plunged
and its value was no longer clear. Suddenly, Taihuttu's
cost of electricity and property rental were too high.
Taihuttu
then gave Dogecoin, a smaller emerging currency, a
go.
We finally met the family Zapp. A dream come true
#travelwithkids #travellongtime #zappfamily #familiazapp
#dreamcometrue #travelersunited
A
post shared by Yolo Familytravel (@yolofamilytravel)
on Oct 7, 2017 at 10:16am PDT
"I've
had a tremendous amount of it, but that coin was worth
nothing," he says. "The portfolio that I
had at the time was perhaps worth 200 euros."
In
the end, he stopped minting for two years.
Dogecoin
becomes a saviour
During Taihuttu's world tour, he got a message from
a friend who had first told him about bitcoin.
"Check
your coins! Check your coins!"
Dogecoin's
value had soared to ten to twenty times its previous
worth.
In
the spring of 2017, bitcoin's value rose to $US3000,
and other cryptocurrencies climbed along with it.
At work, at home, in the supermarket: suddenly everyone
was talking about crypto craze.
Boracay is beautifull and drives you crazy at the
same time. #boracay #philippines #whitesand #beachlife
#crazy #yolo #
A
post shared by Yolo Familytravel (@yolofamilytravel)
on Jun 26, 2017 at 2:32pm PDT
"That
Dogecoin made me realise again: There is something
going on in the world," says Taihuttu.
The
fact that he continued to meet so many bitcoin traders
on his family's world trip was a sign for him. "This
is no coincidence, I thought. So I went back into
it again."
Selling
the house
Back
home, Taihuttu went to the real estate agent and told
them he wanted to sell his house for 85 bitcoin. The
Venlo property had been on the market for eight months,
yet remained unsold.
The
decision attracted a lot of media attention and the
property has been sold under reservation to a cryptocurrency
trader.
"He
came to the house with his wife and they both thought
it was great," says Taihuttu.
"The
asking price of 300,000 euros is as good as achieved,"
says Taihuttu.
What
part of it will be paid in bitcoin is yet to be negotiated
with the buyer.
"It
is likely that the excess will be partly paid for
in bitcoin, so that I have no problem repaying the
mortgage," he says.
The
system is not equipped
At
the end of the day, banks are one of the biggest obstacles
to selling a house entirely for bitcoin. Just like
a conveyancer. Without the intervention of the latter,
a house cannot change owner.
The
buyer typically pays the purchase price into a trust
account set up by the conveyancer, which then passes
the deed of sale. If the transfer of the property
has been registered in the Land Registry, the conveyancer
will transfer the amount to the seller.
These
transactions still have to be carried out in euros,
because the conveyancer does not have a digital wallet
to store cryptocurrencies. And there is another problem:
what if the bitcoin falls in value in the few days
that the purchase price is on the conveyancer's trust
account?
"The
entire system is not designed for it. I wanted to
help start changing that,"says Taihuttu. "Unfortunately,
it has not become what I had expected. We in the Netherlands
have not yet reached the point where we have complete
confidence in blockchain, so the notary will have
to act."
Minimalist
lifestyle
The
new lifestyle look a while for the Taihuttu family
to get used to. Their luxury four-bedroom, 200 square
metre house has been swapped for a chalet on a campsite.
Taihuttu's three daughters, who had each had their
own room, now all bunk in together.
The
family's other items are also for sale, in order to
buy as much bitcoin as possible.
The
family will continue this way until 2020, at which
point Taihuttu hopes bitcoin and blockchain will be
irreplaceable and his wealth will be worth three to
four times as much.
In
the meantime, the family lives with fewer things.
"That
was ultimately the decisive factor for my wife to
say yes to this plan," says Taihuttu. "Education
is the best for the kids. If you raise your kids to
be too materialistic, it is not good. And that was
what we were doing, to be honest."
And
if things go wrong? "Then we will be without
money for a moment. But I don't think that that's
the worst thing that can happen in life."
This
story first appeared in Business Insider. Read
it here or follow BusinessInsider Australia on
Facebook.
(The
Sydney Morning Herald)
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