- Kiyosaki sold $2.25M in Bitcoin to grow his cash-flow businesses.
- New investments may generate $27.5K in tax-free income per month.
- He remains bullish on Bitcoin and plans to reinvest profits.
Robert Kiyosaki has revealed that he recently sold $2.25 million worth of Bitcoin, not because he’s bearish, but to expand his cash-flow portfolio.
Kiyosaki explained that he originally purchased his Bitcoin at around $6,000 per coin years ago. After liquidating part of his holdings, he redirected the proceeds into two surgery centers and a billboard business.
According to him, these new assets are expected to generate roughly $27,500 per month in tax-free cash flow by February. He added that this income will stack on top of the six-figure monthly cushion produced by his long-standing real estate businesses.
Kiyosaki Offloads BTC But Stays Bullish: Plans to Buy Back Later
Despite selling millions in BTC, Kiyosaki said that he remains “very bullish and optimistic on Bitcoin”. He plans to let his new businesses generate a steady cash flow and use that income to resume accumulating more BTC.
This follows the strategy he’s promoted for years: turn high-value assets into cash-flowing businesses, then reinvest that cash into more investments.
Kiyosaki tied this approach to the lessons from Rich Dad Poor Dad and his Cashflow game. Like the game, his real-life strategy is to build assets that generate cash, take advantage of taxes and debt, and reinvest wisely.
Although he was warned not to announce the sale — “too many sickos out there,” he said — he wanted to be transparent in a world full of “fake money and fake teachers.”
“What’s Your Get-Rich Plan?”
Kiyosaki’s tweet ended with a challenge to his audience to define their own wealth-building strategy. He noted that Warren Buffett and Donald Trump each follow different paths, and that his method is not a universal template. Instead, he encouraged readers to think long-term and prepare for what he believes will be a turbulent global economy.
Related: Robert Kiyosaki Labels the U.S. Dollar “Fake Money” Amid Inflation Concerns
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