Advertisement
AD

Main navigation

Advertisement
AD

Doge of Wall Street: Jordan Belfort Goes Back to His Old Ways by Pumping Dogecoin and Shiba Inu

Advertisement
Tue, 27/04/2021 - 16:07
Doge of Wall Street: Jordan Belfort Goes Back to His Old Ways by Pumping Dogecoin and Shiba Inu
Cover image via stock.adobe.com
Read U.TODAY on
Google News

Former stockbroker and convicted felon Jordan Belfort has started shilling a bunch of shady crypto tokens.

In a series of recent tweets, he is promoting Dogecoin, SafeMoon and Shiba Inu, as well as GameStop and AMC, the two most prominent yolo stocks.

Belfort seems to be promising to "pump" the high-risk hodgepodge of cryptos and equities in exchange for increasing his Twitter follower count to 500,000 users by May 1.

Advertisement
Belfort
Image by twitter.com

Such a reckless engagement-seeking statement prompted some Twitter users to joke about Belfort going back to jail.

Belfort
Image by twitter.com

The 58-year-old motivational speaker pleaded guilty to manipulating the U.S. stock market in 1999 as well as money laundering.

Belfort was released from prison in 2008 before rising to stardom following the release of Martin Scorsese's "The Wolf of Wall Street" movie with Leonardo DiCaprio in 2014.

In his 2017 interview with The Street, Belfort bemoaned the proliferation of pump-and-dump schemes on the internet:

It still happens to this day. People use the Internet more now and chat rooms - they talk stocks up.
 

Related
Elon Musk Addresses Accusations About Pumping and Dumping Bitcoin

Belfort's U-turn on crypto

Belfort took interest in Dogecoin earlier this month. After simply posting the #doge tag, he started openly courting the meme coin's community earlier today.

Last month, Belfort changed his tune on Bitcoin, predicting that it would hit $100,000. This came after the "Wolf of Wall Street" called the top crypto "a fraud" in 2017.

Advertisement
TopCryptoNewsinYourMailbox
TopCryptoNewsinYourMailbox
Advertisement

Latest Press Releases

Our social media
There's a lot to see there, too

Popular articles

Advertisement
AD