Original author: Pix, Web3 researcher
Original translation: Felix, PANews
The guy in the picture below is called Fraklin. He made more than $15 million trading NFTs, but then lost everything (even his sanity?). Here is his little-known rise and fall.
Franklin first learned about NFTs from NBA TopShot. But flipping “basketball video clips” didn’t go well for him.
He wasn't making any money, but that didn't stop him.
After BAYC came out, Franklin minted some. Seeing his NFT triple in price, he became obsessed. Over the next two years, he became obsessed and traded a lot.
The picture below is just a flip of BAYC, but things don’t stop there.
In February 2022, Franklin received a $1.5 million offer for his iconic Golden Ape.
He initially paid only $12,000 (cost) and could easily get a 125-fold return if the transaction was completed.
But he rejected the deal (slip of the hand?).
Then things got even crazier.
Franklin once lost 100 ETH ($150,000), which seemed like nothing to him (below).
He often slips up on NFTs and loses 10-20 ETH at a time.
How could he possibly afford such a loss?
Franklin got hooked and started using leverage.
He borrowed more than 10,000 ETH from BendDAO.
At first, he repaid the loan on time (the airdrop yielded good returns)
But then the bear market hit…
If only NFT prices plummeted.
Franklin also suffered setbacks in other areas:
$1.4 Million Lost at Crypto Casinos
Private investment losses of $4.2 million
These setbacks led him to sell all his apes and quit the business…
But Franklin soon returned.
Franklin used his remaining money to start speculating in NFTs again.
Not seeing much in return, he decided it was time for a change…
In February of this year, Franklin sold his Golden Ape for $675,000.
He would occasionally trade whatever was popular at the time.
But soon, things started to go haywire...
Instead of posting NFT transactions, he started posting a video every 5 minutes.
Then it evolved into sending controversial/link-bait tweets.
All this in exchange for some ETH from Fantasy Top.
Franklin was a smart guy (an aerospace engineer by profession).
However, his story perfectly illustrates why leverage should never be used.
If the next round of NFT bull market comes, can he make a comeback?