Articles
Bitcoin

Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson calls Bitcoin a ‘Ponzi scheme’

User Image

Por Anónimo

Creado March 15, 2026|2 minutos de lectura
Main Image

Johnson said that he could understand why gold and Pokémon cards have investment appeal but not Bitcoin, which he characterized as a scam.

Boris Johnson, the former prime minister of the United Kingdom, called Bitcoin (BTC) a “Ponzi Scheme” that has less value than Pokémon cards, collectibles he said had a wide appeal and a multi-decade history.

Johnson wrote an opinion article published in the Daily Mail on Friday that began with a story about a friend who had given 500 British pounds, or about $661, to a man who promised to “double his money” by investing it in BTC.

The friend continued to pay additional “fees” to the scheme’s promoter over the next three and a half years, but was never able to retrieve his funds, despite sinking 20,000 British pounds, or about $26,474, which led to financial hardship, Johnson said. 

“He was struggling to pay his bills. He wasn’t the only one, said my friend. Other people in the neighborhood were going through the same nightmare,” Johnson added. Johnson then argued that collectible Pokémon cards are a more tradable asset than BTC:

Even if you remain pretty impervious to the charm of Pikachu, you can just about see why a decades-old Pikachu card is still a tradeable asset,” he added.

The opinion article drew a wave of online criticism from the Bitcoin community and crypto industry executives, who refuted it by explaining Bitcoin’s fundamental properties and arguing that debt-based fiat currency systems are Ponzi schemes.

Related: Bitcoiners celebrate as the network produces its 20 millionth coin

“Bitcoin is not a Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi requires a central operator promising returns and paying early investors with funds from later ones,” Strategy co-founder Michael Saylor said in response.

“Bitcoin has no issuer, no promoter, and no guaranteed return, just an open, decentralized monetary network driven by code and market demand,” Saylor continued.

Pierre Rochard, CEO of The Bitcoin Bond Company, a BTC-backed financial product issuer, said that the UK is a “giant Ponzi scheme” financed by debt. 

Magazine: Bitcoin’s ‘narrative vacuum,’ Ethereum now inevitable: Trade Secrets

Source: CoinTelegraph


Otros artículos publicados recientemente

Coinbase’s Jesse Pollak says AI agents are the next big wave for crypto payments
Coinbase’s Jesse Pollak says AI agents are the next big wave for crypto payments

Crypto Market Analysis

Pollak, who will be speaking at Consensus Miami 2026 next month, also sees the open-source protocol ...

Europe’s banks are going all in on crypto
Europe’s banks are going all in on crypto

Crypto Market Analysis

Brahimi explores the impact of European banks' integration of digital assets into their existing bro...

Bitcoin at $40,000 would be 'near-unprecedented' statistical outcome, analyst says
Bitcoin at $40,000 would be 'near-unprecedented' statistical outcome, analyst says

Bitcoin

Mean-reversion models suggest bearish targets imply a 0.4th percentile event, far beyond typical mar...

Mike Tyson, Tether CEO, Cathie Wood among speakers at Trump's 'most exclusive' crypto conference
Mike Tyson, Tether CEO, Cathie Wood among speakers at Trump's 'most exclusive' crypto conference

Meme Coins

The event, at which Trump himself is scheduled to speak, gathers top-tier holders of the $TRUMP meme...

Bitcoin falls after Trump reportedly canceled Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner's Iran-talks trip
Bitcoin falls after Trump reportedly canceled Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner's Iran-talks trip

Bitcoin

Trump is expected to speak at his crypto conference in Palm Beach shortly.Source: CoinDesk...

How Anthropic’s Mythos model is forcing the crypto industry to rethink everything about security
How Anthropic’s Mythos model is forcing the crypto industry to rethink everything about security

DeFi

DeFi leaders say that AI will arm both attackers and defenders, and widen the gap between projects t...