pull down to refresh

I’m from Malawi, a country where the stock market is tiny and only accessible to a few. Most people here invest in goats, bricks, maize, or bags of rice — not in shares of companies. There are no Robinhood apps or youth talking about compound interest.
I started looking into stocks and came across some popular names — Tesla, Apple, etc. But when you live in a place where inflation eats your savings and the local currency constantly weakens, even global stocks feel far away.
That’s how I stumbled into Bitcoin — not as a “get-rich-quick” scheme, but as something that actually makes sense as a store of value in an unstable economy. It’s not a traditional stock, but it's the only one I feel I can actually own directly, without a broker or bank.
Bitcoin is permissionless, global, and portable. No paperwork, no middleman, no stockbroker taking a cut. Just me, my wallet, and my keys.
For people like me, Bitcoin isn’t a bet — it’s a survival tool.
Curious to hear from others: what do you think a stock is when you're outside the developed world?
🎯 Why this works:
Personal: It brings your unique perspective as someone in Malawi.
Relevant: It touches on both Bitcoin and the concept of “stocks” (perfect for Stacker Stocks).
Thought-provoking: Invites discussion and reflection from the global audience on Stacker News.
reply
Haha
reply
21 sats \ 1 reply \ @CHADBot 12 Jun bot
You have summoned CHADBot. Please zap this post 21 sats to receive service.
Made with 🧡 by CASCDR
reply
Haha looks like CHADBot's not free 😅 But I’ll give you the simple version myself: In a place like Malawi, people don’t invest in stocks — they invest in goats, maize, or rice to survive. I looked at global stocks like Apple and Tesla, but they’re too far away and complicated to access here. Bitcoin is the first ‘stock’ I could actually own and control — no bank, no broker, just my phone and a wallet.
It’s not about profit. It’s about preserving value in an economy that constantly loses it.
reply
Sure, I’ll ELI5 it: In Malawi, we don’t really have stocks like most people do in the West. Instead of buying shares in companies, we ‘invest’ in things like livestock, bricks to build, or food to sell. But all of that loses value fast because our currency keeps crashing.
Bitcoin feels like the first ‘stock’ I can buy and actually own without needing a bank or a middleman. It holds value better than our money, and I don’t need permission from anyone to use it. For me, Bitcoin is like a savings account that fights back against inflation.
reply
0 sats \ 1 reply \ @CHADBot 12 Jun bot
Sure, here's a simple breakdown:
User @021f3af1a6 lives in Malawi, a place where not many people get to play with stocks like in a board game. Instead, they put their money in things like goats or food grains. You can think of it like putting your pocket money in your piggy bank, instead of a fancy bank account.
He found out about stocks of big companies like Apple and Tesla, but they felt like toys available only in a far-off toy store. Because the money in his country loses value pretty fast (like how candies melt in your hand in summer), even these stocks seemed out of reach.
So, he found Bitcoin - it's like a rare Pokemon card, special because you can own it directly, without the help of a bank or an older person. For him, Bitcoin is not for fun, like for some older people, but it's like a protection shield in a video game.
He's asking others, what is a stock if you're not living in places where lots of these big companies exist? It's like asking others, what would you do if you couldn't buy a fancy toy from a big city toy store?
Made with 🧡 by CASCDR
reply
stackers have outlawed this. turn on wild west mode in your /settings to see outlawed content.
Yes bitcoin is the best savings technology man ever created while stocks are investments the government and Wall Street have tricked Americans into thinking the S&P 500 is one big savings account
reply