He Bought a Condo for 2,900 Bitcoin in 2015 — Then Sold It for Just 7 BTC. Here is the Lesson.
In 2015, Wang Chun — co-founder of F2Pool, one of the world largest Bitcoin mining pools — bought a condominium in Pattaya, Thailand. The price? 2,900 Bitcoin.
At the time, Bitcoin traded at around $270, making the condo worth roughly $785,000. A reasonable real estate purchase.
This week, he sold that same condo. The price? 7 Bitcoin.
The Math That Hurts
- 2015: 2,900 BTC = ~$785,000 (BTC at $270)
- Peak (Oct 2025): Those 2,900 BTC would have been worth $365 million
- Today: Still worth roughly $194 million at current prices
- Sale price: 7 BTC = ~$470,000
The condo lost 40% of its dollar value. The Bitcoin he spent? It gained roughly 24,800%.
The Bigger Lesson: Opportunity Cost
Chun story is not about regret — he was building F2Pool, getting a Saint Kitts passport, and launching Zcash mining from that Pattaya apartment. The condo served its purpose.
But the numbers tell a powerful story about opportunity cost: when you spend an appreciating asset on a depreciating one, the true cost is what you could have had.
For comparison, over the same 2015-2026 period:
- Gold: Up ~275% ($1,200 to $4,500/oz)
- S&P 500: Up ~284% (cumulative)
- Bitcoin: Up ~24,800% ($270 to ~$67,000)
What This Means for You
- Spending crypto on real goods has a hidden cost — every pizza, condo, or coffee bought with BTC in 2015 was astronomically expensive in hindsight
- This does not mean never spend — Chun lived his life, traveled the world, and built a company. That has value too
- The takeaway: If you believe an asset will appreciate significantly, think carefully before converting it to something that will not
Chun himself seemed to take it in stride: “My time in Pattaya gave me my first real experience of living abroad and the courage to explore much farther parts of the world.”
Sources: Cointelegraph | Wang Chun on X
