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Suze Orman says ‘everyone should absolutely' own bitcoin—here's why

American financial advisor, Suze Orman.
Courtesy: Suze Orman

Take a look at bitcoin's price chart, and it's easy to see the appeal for investors. The largest and most widely traded cryptocurrency is up 118% over the past 12 months, and returns have been astronomical since the coin's creation in 2009.

Nevertheless, much of the old guard of investing and personal finance want nothing to do with it.

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Earlier this year, financial podcaster Dave Ramsey compared buying to investing in the Iraqi dinar, which he views as an unstable currency that doesn't enjoy the robust government backing of the U.S. dollar. Due to its volatility, "I wouldn't wish bitcoin investments on someone I really dislike," he said.

Berkshire Hathaway Chair Warren Buffett is out, too. Since bitcoin doesn't produce earnings or throw off cash, Buffett once said he wouldn't pay $25 for the entire world supply.

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But don't count Suze Orman among the crypto naysayers. The financial expert and host of "Women & Money (and Everyone Smart Enough to Listen)" counts bitcoin as part of her portfolio and thinks you'd be wise to hold some as well.

"Everybody should absolutely have exposure to bitcoin," she tells CNBC Make It. "But in case I'm wrong — and I've been wrong — you gotta be OK with losing that money. So put as much money in there as you're OK losing."

Orman's case for holding bitcoin

Crypto enthusiasts cite a variety of reasons to hold bitcoin and other popular cryptocurrencies. Some say bitcoin can operate as a store of value akin to a precious metal, since, similar to gold, there is a finite amount of it available. Others say bitcoin could serve as a long-term hedge for inflation. Others see appeal in bitcoin's function as a currency and hold it in case the dollar or other currencies collapse.

But Orman isn't interested in any of that.

"As younger people make more money and mature, [bitcoin] will be one of their investments of choice, and that will cause it to go up," she says. "I don't think it will ever be a currency or a store of value. But because the younger generation has a fascination with it — and you see the energy — a whole lot of people having interest in it, eventually it could very well catch fire."

Some 70% of cryptocurrency ownership belongs to millennial — those born between 1981 and 1996 — and Gen Z — those born between 1997 and 2012 — investors, despite those two generations making up 41% of the population, according to Morning Consult.

Essentially, Orman's case is that crypto is a speculative asset, one that moves not based on fundamentals but on investor demand, that will continue to attract more speculators. If you're willing to stomach some volatility, she says, you stand to boost the value of your portfolio over the long term.

"This is an investment that you're either going to lose it all, or you're going to let it run until it's worth $100,000 or $200,000," she says.

Keep the risks in mind

Still, Orman says, you can't invest without keeping in mind that your stake could go to zero. That's why she suggests two guardrails.

One is only investing what you can afford to completely lose. For many Americans who will rely on their investments to fund their income in retirement, that's not much. Many experts suggest devoting no more than 5% of your investable funds to high-risk assets.

Orman also favors buying crypto through a bitcoin spot exchange-traded fund rather than owning it in a digital wallet or through a crypto brokerage.

"I feel better owning an ETF because I would never want to see an FTX happen again. And don't tell me it can't happen again," she says, referring to the collapse of the once-prominent crypto exchange.

As for holding bitcoin directly: "I still will never understand how the wallets work and how if you lose your passcode, you never get it again," Orman says.

Moreover, Orman likes the ease of seeing her investment in a portfolio alongside her stocks, ETFs and mutual funds, rather than holding crypto in a separate account. "I can just relate to that. I can understand it," she says.

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