PAC Protocol CEO, founder of Gokhshtein Media and former US congressional candidate David Gokhshtein shared his views on the potential of the Shiba Inu (SHIB) price on Twitter.
‘I can see SHIB touching $0.001.’
David Gokhshtein believes that the second largest meme coin could touch $0.001 but not reach the $1 level. In the comment thread, SHIB fans scolded the influencer for this approach, reminding him that the Shiba Inu dev team has not yet announced an additional burning mechanism for the token.
“People will enter Bitcoin and ETH via SHIB”
In an earlier tweet, the Influencer states that the main potential and popularity of the Shiba Inu could attract a large number of amateur investors to the giants of the crypto market Bitcoin and Ethereum. His tweet came on top of leaked reports of Shiba being listed on Robinhood alongside Solana (SOL), Polygon (MATIC), and Compound (COMP), before the platform made an official statement on the matter. The next cryptocurrency to be listed by Robinhood, according to Gokhshtein, is the trending ApeCoin (APE).
Gokhshtein in October last year, similar to Dogecoin (DOGE) expressed an opinion. He noted that at that time DOGE brought a lot of people to Bitcoin.
Shiba Inu has been listed by Robinhood, as we have mentioned in the news of Kriptokoin.com. When the news was announced on April 12, the price of the token rose more than 20%. However, the coin remains 69.90% below the historic high of $0.00008845, which it hit in late October last year.
Jack Dorsey mocks Robinhood via SHIB listing
Former Twitter chief Bitcoin maximalist Jack Dorsey mocked Robinhood’s decision to add support for dog crypto. In response to the platform’s tweet, where Robinhood wanted to see the community’s reaction to listing Shiba, Dorsey posted a question mark.
By contrast, Robinhood founder Vlad Tenev mocked Dorsey and said that the editing function (Elon Musk’s 9.12% stake on Twitter recently questioned the community before it was announced) asked when it would be added to Twitter. For comparison, Dorsey’s stake in his own company, where he is no longer CEO, is just over 2% overall, giving Elon Musk more power as a shareholder than Jack. The Tesla boss turned down an offer to join the Twitter board, but remains the largest single investor on Twitter.