Robert Kiyosaki spoke again about bitcoin, gold and silver. This time he is trying to convince everyone what a brilliant investor he is. But is it true? A note from the X community suggests not.
Is Robert Kiyosaki lying?
Kiyosaki wrote on X that he stopped buying silver at $60 per ounce, gold at $300 per ounce and finally bitcoin at $6,000.
I sold some bitcoins and some gold. I hate selling because I hate paying capital gains tax. Today… I will patiently wait for new lows for gold and Bitcoin, and then maybe I will buy again. Rich dad’s lesson: “Your profit is made when you buy… not when you sell”
– he added.
The problem is that nothing is lost on the Internet and the community added a note to his post on X, which shows that he is lying.
He said on January 22, 2026 that he was “buying bitcoins.” Bitcoin was trading above $90,000 at the time of this post
– we read.
In response to the note, Kiyosaki published a new post. His defense was that he wasn’t lying at all. He suggested that the person who accused him of lying might not like him for something.
My advice to you after reading this text… stay away from people who are more interested in the date of acquisition than the value and price of the asset
– he added.
An “expert” who built his popularity on lies?
Robert Kiyosaki is an American entrepreneur, investor and financial author, best known for his book Rich Dad Poor Dad (Rich dad, poor dad), which became a global bestseller and was translated into many languages. His subsequent publications are actually copies of it.
Kiyosaki himself is a controversial figure. His “wisdom” is mainly based on scaring investors: either with a “global reset” or with the collapse of the US dollar. He has been publicly warning about the global financial crisis for many years, often in very dramatic terms. He repeats, like a mantra, that the world economy is on the verge of “the biggest crash in history”, traditional currencies are losing value and do not protect your savings (this is true, but also a cliché).
It encourages investing in hard assets – gold, silver, bitcoin and ether – which are insurance against a system collapse.
However, it is worth clarifying that his forecasts and warnings are very general. In fact, he repeats the same slogans that sell well in the media, but do not bring much value.