Yes, you're correct, I put the same allocation in ETH as all altcoins. That's a fixed USD value for the investment, though the token may go way higher or lower than that value over time. I don't add or rebalance to any particular altcoin, though I raise my allocation to all altcoins when the opportunities present themselves. Does that make sense?
I don't quite understand the process of purchasing and distributing the altcoin as you described.
Read a few articles about altcoins on your site Mark and a bit confused still.
Trying to understand how to look at Ethereum / how much of my portfolio to allocate to it.
It seems your argument is even Ethereum is not necessarily proven, so you just put a fixed amount of USD in and then move on? I don't fully follow.
I do notice you say:
> When all else is equal, small altcoins will give you better returns for the risk you take—even if their bigger competitor seems unstoppable.
Anyway, thank you for your work! Really nice to have a plan with everything. Will read your work more closely to understand.
Hi Rishi. I'm so glad you commented!
Yes, you're correct, I put the same allocation in ETH as all altcoins. That's a fixed USD value for the investment, though the token may go way higher or lower than that value over time. I don't add or rebalance to any particular altcoin, though I raise my allocation to all altcoins when the opportunities present themselves. Does that make sense?