Carlos Matos

Carlos Matos is a New York-based investor whose impassioned speech at a 2017 Bitconnect conference in Thailand — culminating in the rallying cry “Hey hey hey! Wassup Bitconnect!” — became one of crypto’s most enduring memes, simultaneously capturing the uncritical euphoria of the 2017–2018 bull market and the genuine human tragedy of retail investors who lost their savings in a $3.45 billion Ponzi scheme.


The Speech

In October 2017, Matos took the stage at Bitconnect’s annual conference in Pattaya, Thailand, and delivered an impassioned, high-energy speech about financial freedom and his belief in the platform’s “trading bot” returns. He concluded with a rallying cry:

“Hey hey hey! Wassup Bitconnect! My name is Carlos Matos and I want to tell you something! Bitconneeeeeect!”

The crowd erupted. The clip went viral. Within months, Bitconnect had collapsed.


The Context: Bitconnect

Bitconnect was a lending and exchange platform that promised extraordinary daily returns (~1%) through a proprietary “trading bot.” It was widely suspected of being a Ponzi scheme — its returns were not economically plausible, and its structure required constant new investment to pay existing investors.

In January 2018, Bitconnect shut down its exchange and lending operations after receiving cease-and-desist orders from US state regulators. Its token (BCC) collapsed from $400+ to nearly zero within days. Total investor losses: approximately $3.45 billion.

Carlos Matos was a victim — he had invested in and lost money to Bitconnect. His speech was given before the collapse.


The Meme and Its Meaning

The clip spread virally across YouTube and social media as shorthand for retail crypto mania — the uncritical enthusiasm, the cult-like conference atmosphere, and the willingness to trust platforms offering impossible returns. For many in crypto, it represents the full arc of how speculative collapses happen: real people, genuine excitement, catastrophic outcomes.

It also carries an uncomfortable irony: Matos was a victim, not an organizer. He lost money. The speech that made him famous was given while he believed in something that turned out to be fraud.


After Bitconnect

Matos subsequently appeared at crypto events, partly leaning into his meme status. He gave interviews acknowledging his loss, discussed the experience of becoming an internet symbol, and engaged with the broader crypto community with apparent humor and self-awareness. He reflected on the experience with a mixture of acknowledgment and perspective — noting the internet had made him famous in a way he would have preferred to avoid.


Cultural Legacy

The Bitconnect speech is one of crypto’s canonical memes, alongside John McAfee’s price predictions and the Bitcoin pizza transaction. It resurfaces during every crypto bull market as a warning about what enthusiasm and FOMO can do to otherwise reasonable people — and as a reminder that behind every Ponzi scheme are real people who genuinely believed.


History

  • 2017 — Bitconnect launches and grows rapidly; promises ~1% daily returns via a proprietary trading bot
  • October 2017 — Carlos Matos delivers his famous speech at Bitconnect’s annual conference in Pattaya, Thailand
  • January 16–17, 2018 — Bitconnect shuts down exchange and lending platform following US state cease-and-desist orders; BCC collapses from $400+ to near zero; estimated $3.45 billion in investor losses
  • 2018–2019 — Matos begins appearing at crypto events; embraces meme status with mixed feelings; the clip continues to resurface
  • 2021 — The Netflix documentary Trust No One: The Hunt for the Crypto King and other productions revisit the Bitconnect era; Matos clip included in retrospective coverage
  • 2022–present — Clip resurfaces annually during bull market peaks as a warning of retail mania

Common Misconceptions

  • “Carlos Matos was part of the Bitconnect scam.” — Matos was a retail investor and victim. He was not an organizer, promoter on the record, or affiliate marketer for Bitconnect — he was a conference attendee who gave a speech about his own experience as a believer.
  • “The ‘Wassup Bitconnect’ speech was staged.” — The speech was genuine. Matos was an actual investor who genuinely believed in Bitconnect at the time of the conference.

Social Media Sentiment

  • r/CryptoCurrency: The Matos clip is regularly shared as a bull market warning; threads analyzing the clip are a staple of cycle-peak discussions.
  • X/Twitter: The clip resurfaces regularly; Matos is periodically tagged in discussions about Bitconnect, Ponzi schemes, and retail crypto mania. He occasionally responds with good humor.
  • YouTube: The original conference clip has millions of views across multiple re-upload channels; it is one of the most referenced crypto videos of all time.

Last updated: 2026-04


Related Terms

See Also

  • Bitconnect — the Ponzi scheme whose collapse Matos became the unwilling face of
  • Celsius Collapse — a later, larger CeFi collapse with similar dynamics of retail belief in unsustainable returns
  • FTX — another major crypto fraud that revived comparisons to Bitconnect and the Matos meme

Sources