Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad and one of the more outspoken macro voices in personal finance, published a series of price predictions on March 17 tied to what he describes as an imminent collapse of the largest asset bubbles in history.
His targets for Bitcoin and Ethereum are among the most aggressive publicly stated figures from any mainstream financial commentator.
Kiyosaki’s framework is not a technical analysis call. It is a macro collapse scenario. He argues that a bubble bust of historic proportions is approaching, though he acknowledges he cannot identify the specific event that triggers it. His framing is explicit: the question is not whether the collapse happens but when.
His post-crash price targets are built on the assumption that hard assets and scarce alternatives to traditional financial infrastructure will be the primary beneficiaries in the year following a global financial crisis comparable to or larger than 2008. Gold at $35,000 per ounce, silver at $200 per ounce, Bitcoin at $750,000, and Ethereum at $95,000 are his stated one-year post-crash projections.
The internal logic is consistent, even if the numbers are extreme. Each asset he names is either physically scarce, algorithmically capped, or structurally outside the traditional banking system. Kiyosaki has held this view in various forms for years, but the specific price targets and the urgency of his current framing represent a more aggressive version of that position than he has previously published.
It is worth working through what these targets mean in practical terms. Bitcoin at $750,000 would represent roughly a ten-fold increase from current levels near $73,500 at the time of writing. At that price, Bitcoin’s total market capitalization would approach $15 trillion, exceeding the current combined market cap of every major global stock market outside the United States.
Ethereum at $95,000 would represent approximately a 41-fold increase from its current price near $2,285 at the time of writing. That target implies an ETH market capitalization of roughly $11.4 trillion, based on current circulating supply.
Those are not impossible numbers in the context of a full global financial system collapse and a generational rotation into alternative stores of value. They are, however, contingent on a scenario that most mainstream economists do not consider the base case. Kiyosaki is not presenting these as probabilities. He is presenting them as his personal projections under a specific set of conditions that he believes are more likely than the consensus acknowledges.
Kiyosaki’s track record on timing is worth noting. He has been predicting a major financial collapse and corresponding hard asset surge for most of the past decade. Some of his directional calls have been correct over long enough timeframes. His timing calls have been consistently early, which in financial markets is functionally indistinguishable from being wrong until the event eventually occurs.
The structural argument for Bitcoin and Ethereum as crisis-resistant assets has gained considerably more institutional credibility in recent months. Bernstein’s report earlier this week framing Strategy as a Bitcoin central bank of last resort, and Bitmine’s explicit geopolitical hedging thesis for Ethereum accumulation, both reflect mainstream institutional voices moving toward a version of the same argument Kiyosaki has been making from the retail side for years. The gap between Kiyosaki’s framing and institutional framing is narrowing, even if the specific price targets remain his own.
Whether the crash he is predicting arrives, and whether it produces the asset price outcomes he projects, remains entirely speculative. What is not speculative is that a growing number of investors, institutional and retail alike, are positioning for a world in which Bitcoin and Ethereum serve as meaningful hedges against systemic financial risk.
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