Irish Goldman Sachs executive quits after making millions from Dogecoin

Aziz McMahon previously worked with ABN Amro and Ulster Bank in Dublin

The Dogecoin digital currency started as a joke parodying bitcoin. Photograph: iStock
The Dogecoin digital currency started as a joke parodying bitcoin. Photograph: iStock

An Irish senior manager at Goldman Sachs in London has quit the US investment bank after making millions from investing in Dogecoin, the joke crypto asset which has risen by more than 1,000 per cent in value this year.

City sources said Aziz McMahon, a managing director and head of emerging-market sales, had resigned from the bank after making money from investing in the digital currency based on the Doge internet meme.

Backed by famous supporters including the Tesla founder, Elon Musk, the rapper Snoop Dogg and the Kiss bassist Gene Simmons, the digital asset similar to bitcoin has soared in value over recent months.

Based on an internet meme – a humorous online phrase or photo, on this occasion a dog called Doge – the cryptocurrency rose above $0.72 (€0.59) against the dollar last week in anticipation of Mr Musk’s appearance on the hit US TV show Saturday Night Live.

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It has plunged by more than 30 per cent this week since Mr Musk’s appearance to about $0.50, according to Coindesk. However, it is still up by more than 1,000 per cent from the start of 2021.

Little is known about how much money Trinity College Dublin graduate Mr McMahon made exactly from betting on Dogecoin, after his departure was first reported by the website efinancialcareers. The banker aged in his 40s, who has worked for Goldman Sachs for 14 years, did not respond to requests for comment. However, sources said they believed it was a substantial sum and that he had since left Goldman Sachs.

It is believed Mr McMahon, who previously worked with ABN Amro and Ulster Bank in Dublin, made the money investing on his own personal account and was not involved in trading cryptocurrencies for Goldman Sachs.

Speculative investment

Created in 2013 by two software engineers from IBM and Adobe, the Dogecoin digital currency started as a joke parodying bitcoin. It has, however, rocketed in value amid a wave of speculative investment in crypto assets, fuelled by a buzz online and an aim to perpetuate the joke by pumping up its value.

Some early buyers of the digital currency are believed to have amassed small fortunes as the value of Dogecoin soars, including one anonymous owner with a stake thought to be worth more than $2 billion.

It also comes amid growing interest in digital currencies from investment banks and large money managers. Goldman Sachs opened a bitcoin trading desk last week, in a move reversing a 2018 decision to stay out of the market.

Some investors believe crypto assets could offer protection against inflation, fearing the value of fiat currencies – such as the pound, dollar and euro – could be eroded as global economic growth accelerates this year as the Covid-19 pandemic recedes.

However, others warn prices are only sustained by speculative buyers. – Guardian service