Although documented statistics about cryptocurrency trading and substance abuse are hard to come by, addiction experts are treating an increasing number of crypto traders.
Abdullah Boulard, founder and CEO at The Balance Luxury Rehab, tells Magazine that a number of crypto traders struggle with substance abuse. “Our client base is diverse, but this is a unique demographic that we’ve seen an increase in over the recent years,” Boulard says.
According to Boulard, the high intensity of cryptocurrency trading combined with 24/7 accessibility encourages some to use stimulants to keep up the pace. “Substances like amphetamines, cocaine and even excessive caffeine use are common among these individuals,” says Boulard.
Caroline Ellison, the former CEO of Alameda Research, tweeted about the use of stimulants in April 2021.
New York Magazine subsequently reported that a successful trader who met with Ellison commented about her use of stimulants and their overall effects on members of the community. “Crypto really fucked with a lot of people’s perceptions of money. A lot of stuff doesn’t feel real. And if you add speed …”
Prior to that, in September 2019, the former CEO of disgraced cryptocurrency exchange FTX, Sam Bankman-Fried, tweeted about his use of stimulants and sleeping pills.
What goes up, must come down
Boulard also sees a lot of patients who use benzodiazepines. Street-named “downers” or “benzos,” benzodiazepines include commonly used drugs like Xanax, Valium and Ativan.
He believes that traders use these prescription drugs to cope with anxiety and insomnia, symptoms likely created by the highs and lows of trading and by the use of the stimulants. Boulard says that alcohol is used for the same purpose.
Dr. Lawrence Weinstein, chief medical officer at American Addiction Centers agrees. Weinstein tells Magazine, “Alcohol use disorder is also common among those with a gambling disorder, of which cryptocurrency trading is a subtype.”
Although some patients who have come through Weinstein’s programs don’t necessarily meet the clinical diagnostic criteria for a gambling disorder, they do have a history of cryptocurrency trading experience and typically present with an alcohol use disorder, stimulant use disorder or both.
What’s the link?
Cryptocurrency trading addiction is increasingly becoming a problem for some members of the community. According to Weinstein, compulsive trading addiction and substance abuse can go hand in hand. “Behavioral addictions and substance addictions have a lot of overlap in terms of risk factors, but especially from a neurobiological standpoint,” Weinstein says.
A 2022 case study authored by Dr. Harun Olcay Sonkurt of Anadolu Hospital in Turkey presents a 30-year-old research student addicted to cryptocurrency trading and alcohol. The student started out trading Bitcoin and soon added altcoins to his portfolio. After just a few months, he started to trade margins and subsequently lost more than two year’s worth of his salary. Unable to stop or control his trading, the student struggled with restlessness and anger. His mind was constantly focused on price fluctuations and trades.
“Since he experiences intense anxiety in trades with high leverage, he drinks alcohol before the trade,” Sonkurt writes.
What happens to the brain?
Weinstein believes that behaviors like cryptocurrency trading can cause increases and decreases in the neurotransmitter dopamine, just like alcohol and some drugs. Dopamine is a chemical messenger that the body produces and that the nervous system uses to send messages between cells.
“The activation of the brain’s reward system by the neurotransmitter dopamine is a significant factor in the development of an addiction. A dopamine spike caused by the use of a substance (or performance of a behavior) helps reinforce that enjoyable feeling by creating a link between the thing that elicits that feeling with the desire to do it again,” Weinstein says.
According to Weinstein, a dopamine spike is followed by a crash. When this happens repeatedly, the extensive neurocircuitry involved with the brain’s reward system can be damaged, which eventually negatively affects other areas of the brain.
The brain’s habit-forming center and the area responsible for impulse control, as well as the section controlling feelings of uneasiness, irritability and anxiety, are all affected. “These are also three regions of the brain that play a key role in the development of addiction,” says Weinstein.
Chronic behaviors like addictive crypto trading and the use of substances alter brain circuitry and cause pathological changes. Weinstein says that at this point, individuals no longer have the element of choice. The brain has created new neural connections, and the individual requires the substance to function normally.
“If someone with a severe alcohol use disorder were to suddenly cease consumption, they run the very real risk of dying because the body has become so dependent on the substance. I’ve seen many patients compare their time in active addiction to starvation — it’s not a choice or a want; it’s a need. They aren’t waking up every day choosing to remain addicted to a substance,” Weinstein says.
Money doesn’t make it any better
Although some cryptocurrency traders who struggle with substance abuse lose it all, some are very successful. Disciplined, experienced traders can make a lot of money very quickly. Even newbies can strike it rich for a little while if they bet on the right coin.
The student in Sonkurt’s study says that he “finds it thrilling to earn the same amount of money as he earns by working for months with high leverage in minutes.”
Boulard believes that “access to vast financial resources can exacerbate substance abuse if it remains untreated,” and Weinstein says that having the means to sustain an addiction indefinitely can make it worse and prolong it.
He suggests that being able to acquire a chosen substance with ease disincentivizes stopping, all the while mitigating many of the addiction’s negative consequences.
“Aside from eliminating access to funds, and potentially access to the addictive substance or activity, there may be very few other avenues that would motivate the individual to seek help for their addiction,” Weinstein says. “The speedy acquisition of wealth can be disorienting, can lead to lifestyle changes and can create pressures that make them more prone to substance abuse,” Boulard adds.
What does treatment look like?
Boulard tailors treatment to the individual. Usually, this includes detoxification and psychotherapy. He integrates holistic therapies like mindfulness training, yoga and dietary adjustments.
“We also incorporate financial counseling and educate our clients about healthier trading habits,” Boulard says.
Weinstein tells Magzine that “CBT or cognitive behavioral therapy is the most common form of therapy used in the treatment of process or behavioral addictions. This form of therapy helps individuals identify certain situations that can be triggering and utilize the coping skills they’ve developed through therapy to prevent a relapse in the addictive behavior.”
He feels that It’s very likely that someone with a behavioral addiction has a co-occurring mental health condition. Properly and professionally treating both would yield the best outcomes.
According to the National Institute of Health, people addicted to drugs often suffer from other health, legal, familial or social problems that must be addressed simultaneously. The NIH says that “the best programs provide a combination of therapies and other services to meet an individual patient’s needs.”
Is it possible to treat yourself?
Boulard advises against it. Although it’s not impossible to beat an addiction on your own, long-term outcomes may be less likely.
“While it’s theoretically possible to overcome addiction without formal treatment, professional help dramatically improves success rates and reduces the likelihood of relapse,” Boulard says.
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, there are strong associations between drugs and related cues. When someone tries to stop using drugs, stressful experiences may lead to cravings and drug use again. “Returning to use after stopping, or relapse, is not uncommon. And, like addiction itself, it’s not a sign of weakness,” says NIDA.
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Mitch Eiven
Mitch is a writer who covers cryptocurrency, politics, the intersection between the two and a handful of other, unrelated topics. He believes that crypto is the future of finance and feels privileged that he has opportunities to report on it.
The pound has fallen sharply after the chancellor announced the biggest tax rises in a generation.
Over the last three days, sterling has dropped by 1.2% (in trade weighted terms) – the biggest fall in 18 months.
Between around 1.30pm and 5.30pm today, versus the dollar, it dropped from about 129.9c to the pound to about 128.6c. In the same period, against the euro, it went from 119.3c to the pound to about 118.4c.
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In addition, yields for 10-year UK bonds – the cost or interest rate charged for long-term government borrowing – have gone past 4.5% for the first time in a year.
Ed Conway, Sky News’s economics and data editor, said those yields are “pretty much halfway towards the danger zone” – a zone identified by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR).
However, he said other European bonds had risen, too. “But the UK does seem to be moving faster than most of the others,” he added.
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While cautioning that the budget is still very new, Conway said the “upshot” is that Rachel Reeves’s “room for manoeuvre” is already diminishing “because of market moves”.
Markets are reacting in “quite a violent way”, Conway said.
“It’s really unusual to see this after a budget, and that will have a bearing on how much this government will be able to afford in the future,” he added.
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1:22
‘Raising taxes was not an easy decision’
A sudden rise in the yields of 10-year UK bonds followed Liz Truss’s disastrous “mini-budget” of September 2022, which led to a surge in the cost of borrowing for ordinary consumers, while the pound slumped to a 37-year low against the dollar.
It is “certainly not like that at the moment”, Conway said.
Nonetheless, market movements will be “enough to really concern people at the Treasury”, he added, “because it suggests that a lot of traders are looking at how much money this government is borrowing, and they’re saying: ‘Hang on, maybe we’re going to charge you more’.”
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0:33
The pound has weakened and gilt yields – the cost of borrowing by the UK government – has increased in response to the budget, which saw Rachel Reeves introduce the biggest tax hike in a generation.
While Conway said it does not feel like a “crisis point”, he said the “calculus for this government” may be changing.
Jack Meaning, UK chief economist at Barclays, said market reaction was “materially different” to what happened in 2022.
Bond yields since Ms Reeves’s budget are up by about 0.3%, while in 2022 the rise was about 1.5%, he said.
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7:18
Reeves acting like ‘compulsive liar’
The conversation Barclays is having with its customers is also different to that in 2022, Mr Meaning added.
At that time, people were wondering whether a “big crisis point” had been reached.
This time, he said the focus is on comments from the OBR about a potential rise in inflation, and the potential knock-on effect as the Bank of England makes decisions on interest rates in the next few months.
The prime minister’s official spokesperson refused to talk about bond prices.
“We don’t comment on market movements,” they said.
“The chancellor has been very clear that first and foremost, this budget has been about restoring fiscal stability, and she’s outlined two new robust fiscal rules, which put public finances on a sustainable path.”
She told Sky News’ Breakfast With Kay Burley that, unlike the previous Conservative government, she has included everything ministers will spend in their forecast, including £11.8bn compensation for victims of the infected blood scandal and £1.8bn for victims of the Post Office accounting scandal.
Ms Reeves insisted the tax rises would “fix the foundations and wipe the slate clean” and that this would be a one-off budget.
She added: “As a result of what we’ve done, we’re not going to have to come back and ever do a budget like this again, because we’ve brought everything out into the open.”
The chancellor also admitted growth “is largely unchanged” in the next five years, as revealed by the Office for Budget Responsibility’s (OBR) report on the budget.
But she said that is because she is looking at the economy in the long-term.
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She said: “For the first time, the OBR are now looking at economic growth over a longer time frame.
“And that’s really important because often politicians make short-term decisions rather than things that are in the long term interests of the country.”
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1:22
‘Raising taxes was not an easy decision’
Ms Reeves said she had to make the tax rises she did, despite promising not to raise taxes beyond Labour’s manifesto, because of “the circumstances that I inherited” from the Conservatives as she repeated they left a £22bn black hole.
“I could have swept that under the carpet and pretended it didn’t exist, or try and raise a bit of money this year and a bit more next year,” she said.
“I didn’t want to do that.
“I wanted to be open and honest, to wipe the slate clean, to put our public finances on a stable trajectory, to make sure that our NHS is properly funded so we can bring down those huge waiting lists.”
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3:28
UK’s economic growth forecast
Ms Reeves’ predecessor, the Conservative Party’s Jeremy Hunt, said Wednesday was a “bad day for trust in British politics” and said it will mean “lower pay, lower living standards, higher inflation, higher mortgages” for ordinary families.
He told Sky News: “Because 30 times this year before the election, the chancellor said she had no plans to increase tax outside of what was explicitly written in the Labour manifesto.
“And we had the biggest tax raising budget in British history.”
The shadow chancellor said a Conservative budget would have taken “the harder path” by cutting the number of people on benefits to 2019 levels to fund public services, which he said would release £34bn a year.
He added he does not think “anyone actually believes this £22bn number… but she didn’t increase taxes by £22bn, she increased them by £40bn”.
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“This was not about her legacy. This was a choice,” he added.
“This was the budget that she wanted to do all along. And it’s a legitimate choice. It’s one I disagree with. But if she’d wanted to do that, she should have told us before the election we could have had the debate.”