We asked crypto influencers, veteran
traders, VC fund founders, and more to share their top tips, essential Twitter follows, and
the stories behind their best trades ever. In this article, we speak to Scalar Capital
founder – and former Koinmex product manager – Linda Xie.
When you ask crypto experts for a list of the
smartest and most clear-eyed people in the space, venture-fund founder Linda Xie is a name
that comes up more than just about anyone. Xie (pronounced “shay”) became interested in
Bitcoin in college, but it wasn’t until Overstock.com began accepting it as payment in 2014
that she felt optimistic enough about the future of digital money to leave a finance job. She
took a role as one of Koinmex’s first thirty employees and eventually rose to become a
product manager focused on regulations and compliance. Since 2017, she’s led the crypto
investment management firm Scalar Capital, which focuses on cryptoasset startups . “We’re very
long-term oriented,” she says. “So we like to get really involved and help out founders and
participate in communities.”
Understand your options
It can be hard for beginners to know where to
start with crypto. In addition to the obvious starting point of Bitcoin, Xie suggests looking
at the opportunities that Ethereum offers. “We’re seeing significant amounts of capital
there,” she says. “So I think it's worth looking at Ethereum and its ecosystem
seriously.”
Dig into Ethereum
According to Xie, one big reason to be
optimistic about Ethereum is because it’s the main technology that underpins the booming world
of DeFi (decentralized finance): “What’s getting traction? What are people willing to pay fees
for? What's driving volume? Where's the developer activity?“
Don’t sweat timing too much
When prices are rising fast, it’s natural to
feel like you missed out if you didn’t buy earlier. Xie says not to sweat timing too much,
especially if you’re buying with long-term holding in mind. “If you’re looking at an asset and
saying, 'It's early and this is actually where I strongly believe it could be
headed,’ it’s not as important to time the price exactly," she says. "It could make
sense to dollar-cost average into a purchase with an amount you are comfortable losing.
Because if you zoom out into the long-term perspective, a lot of these are still in the early
days."
Start small
Xie’s first rule for anyone new to crypto is
to only invest what you can afford to lose. Especially when it comes to DeFi — which is hard
to understand without trying and is best left to more experienced traders. Even then, she
suggests taking it slow and starting with the biggest, most established protocols: “Maybe just
play around with small amounts of capital on [the decentralized lending and borrowing
protocol] Compound, lending out some of your crypto and earning yields. Or exchange some small
amounts on a decentralized exchange. But I really want to emphasize that I've known
people that have gotten burned in DeFi – it’s very risky.”
Go to the source
Because the crypto world is so new, you can
usually dig up a wealth of information that the team behind (or community around) many
projects have written themselves on Medium or Twitter. “And you should join the Discord or
Telegram group or whatever they use to manage the community,” Xie adds. “It can be great to
really get in the weeds and understand the project and the community.”
Look for trends
Some of Xie’s favorite sources of info,
especially about DeFi projects, are EthHub, the Defiant, Coin Metrics, and DeFi Pulse. She
also reads a newsletter called Our Network by Spencer Noon, another investor in the space.
“When I see a lot of people I respect talking about something, it's definitely worth
looking at,” she says. “It doesn't necessarily mean it's a good investment,
but it’s a strong indication that I need to at least understand what a thing is.”
Give crypto to friends and family
Xie has been giving crypto as birthday
presents for years, but she recently started gifting Bitcoin and Ethereum to friends’ kids and
asking their parents to hold onto it until they’re old enough to use it. “By then, in my
opinion, it should be worth a substantial amount,” she says. “But part of what’s cool about
this idea is just getting to see what happens when people hold crypto for such long periods of
time.”