“HE’S BROKE!!” Joe Rogan & Mike Tyson EXPOSE Mayweather’s Financial TROUBLES After $402M Scam

Lavish spending, risky investments, and a $402 million gamble — is Floyd Mayweather still undefeated, or just fighting to stay afloat?

In a bombshell conversation that’s sent shockwaves through both the sports and financial worlds, Joe Rogan and Mike Tyson have openly raised red flags about Floyd Mayweather’s money moves — or lack thereof.

The undefeated boxing champ might still be 50-0 in the ring, but outside of it, he might be on the ropes financially.

Let’s be real: Mayweather has always flaunted wealth like it’s a championship belt — cash stacks, luxury cars, private jets, and enough jewelry to blind a small country.

But lately, the shine’s starting to tarnish.

In a recent episode of Tyson’s podcast, both he and Rogan pulled no punches, hinting that Money Mayweather might be hemorrhaging funds faster than he can land a jab.

“He spends so much money… and also has gotten really into NFTs,” Tyson said, shaking his head.

“That’s his heroin — the gym and gambling.”

$402 Million Portfolio or Panic Purchase?

Let’s talk numbers: Floyd Mayweather reportedly dropped $42 million on a portfolio of 60 buildings with over 1,000 affordable housing units in Manhattan.

On paper, it sounds like a smart pivot — trading Bentleys for buildings.

But insiders whisper this isn’t just savvy investing.

It’s damage control.

Some see it as a desperate attempt to anchor wealth that’s been bleeding through questionable crypto bets and endless exhibition fights.

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Tyson, a man who’s been through his own financial wars, didn’t mince words.

“He don’t need any more money,” Tyson mused, “but he’s out here fighting YouTubers.

That tells you everything.”

Joe Rogan echoed the sentiment.

“Exhibitions don’t touch his record,” he said, “but they keep the money coming.

Problem is, you’ve got to keep the machine fed.”

And feeding it Floyd has been — with NFT schemes, speculative ventures, and a lifestyle straight out of Scarface’s wet dreams.

But not everyone’s convinced it’s working.

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Living Rich, Not Living Wealthy

Enter Snoop Dogg with the mic drop: “I’m no longer rich, I’m wealthy.

That’s a bloodline thing.”

The difference? Rich buys diamonds.

 Wealth buys dividends.

And according to Snoop, Floyd’s still caught up in the shiny distractions of short-term riches.

Mayweather brags about making risky investments “people don’t understand.”

That might’ve worked when he was stacking 9-figure purses after Vegas mega-bouts.

But now? It’s looking more like crypto roulette than calculated empire-building.

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McGregor, Millions & Missteps

Let’s rewind to the Conor McGregor super-fight — a fight widely viewed as a glorified cash grab.

Sure, it bagged Mayweather a $100 million payday, but it also set the tone: Mayweather fights for the bank, not the belt.

Since then, he’s been on a global exhibition tour fighting social media stars and regional champs.

It’s showbiz, not sports.

And Tyson called it: “That’s not love for the game.

That’s need.

Financial need.”

The Legacy Erosion

Here’s the real tragedy.

Floyd’s legacy — untouchable, elite, the very blueprint for boxing greatness — is now being overshadowed by talk of scams, NFTs, and questionable business ventures.

Instead of mentoring young fighters or building a lasting promotional empire, he’s chasing gimmicks.

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Sure, he talks the talk: “This is my era… I’m not bragging, just speaking facts,” he said in a recent interview.

But at what point does self-belief become self-parody?

From Boxing Ring to Financial Ring

Mike Tyson’s seen the highs and the disastrous lows of being rich without a plan.

His concern was genuine.

“Floyd’s always in the gym.

He don’t do drugs.

That’s his addiction,” Tyson said.

“But if you spend like that, you better keep making it like that.”

Mayweather might still be landing financial punches, but Rogan and Tyson suggest he’s also dodging debt.

With talk of a $402 million scam swirling — likely referencing overleveraged portfolios or shady NFT pump-and-dumps — the public perception is shifting from “richest athlete alive” to “athlete on borrowed time.”

Final Bell: A King Without a Kingdom?

At the end of the day, Floyd Mayweather may still hold the crown in terms of boxing greatness.

But as Rogan, Tyson, and even Snoop imply, that crown’s starting to wobble.

Is Floyd broke? Not in the technical sense.

Is he living beyond his means? Absolutely.

Is his legacy in danger? It already is.

In a world that worships wealth but forgets sustainability, Mayweather may be the poster child for winning every fight — except the one that really matters: financial wisdom.

Tick, tick, tick… The final round might be closer than he thinks.