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Bitcoin Touches All Time High $113,000

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Anon

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Bitcoin ATH

In 2016, $1,000 could buy you just over two Bitcoins. Today, that same stake would be worth well over $200,000 — a staggering 200x return. While many label this growth as “unbelievable” or “lucky,” the rise of Bitcoin is neither random nor finished.

Bitcoin has now surpassed the market capitalizations of tech titans like Google (Alphabet) and even Silver — a store of value that humans have cherished for millennia. Only a handful of assets in the world are more valuable, including Gold, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and NVIDIA.

We are living through a historic shift — and Bitcoin is at the center of it.

The Shift from Fiat to Digital Gold

Bitcoin isn’t just a technology or a financial asset. It’s a monetary revolution — a digitally native form of money born out of the ashes of the 2008 financial crisis. When fiat currencies are losing purchasing power, when central banks are trapped in cycles of debt and dilution, when real estate becomes unattainable and bonds no longer yield real returns — people start looking elsewhere.

Enter Bitcoin: the first globally accessible, digitally scarce asset. A form of “money” that can’t be printed, censored, or inflated away. Its total supply is capped at 21 million coins. No politician, banker, or government can change that.

In a world addicted to money printing and systemic bailouts, Bitcoin offers something both simple and radical: rules without rulers.

The Dotcom Era All Over Again — But Bigger

Many investors compare Bitcoin’s current journey to the dotcom boom of the late 1990s and early 2000s — and the similarities are striking.

Back then, everyone believed the internet would change the world. They were right. But the market got ahead of itself. Speculative bets on “.com” companies with no real products led to a massive crash.

Still, out of the wreckage, giants like Amazon, Google, and eBay emerged — redefining commerce and communication for the 21st century.

Bitcoin and crypto are on a similar trajectory. There have been multiple bubbles and crashes — 2013, 2017, 2022 — each time wiping out over-leveraged speculators and hype-driven projects. But Bitcoin, like Amazon post-dotcom crash, has survived, matured, and continued to grow.

The biggest difference? Bitcoin is not a company. It doesn’t sell anything. It doesn’t have quarterly earnings. It’s just code — an open monetary network powered by mathematics and secured by decentralized miners.

And unlike dotcom companies that relied on population growth and consumer markets, Bitcoin thrives because it transcends borders, governments, and traditional economics.

Real Estate, Bonds, and Stocks: Dependent on a Growing World

Traditional assets — stocks, bonds, and real estate — are heavily dependent on demographic growth and trust in fiat systems.

Bonds depend on governments repaying debt with increasingly diluted currencies.

– Real estate relies on growing populations and access to affordable credit.

– Stocks depend on consumption, GDP growth, and central bank policy.

But we’re entering a new macro reality:

– Aging populations are slowing economic growth.

– Government debts are exploding beyond any historical precedent.

– Monetary policy is cornered — central banks can’t raise rates without breaking things, and they can’t cut too deeply without stoking inflation.

Bitcoin was designed for exactly this world.

It doesn’t rely on GDP. It doesn’t care about interest rates. It operates on a predictable, unchangeable monetary policy — and people around the world are starting to understand the value of that.

Institutional Adoption: Still Just Getting Started

Many people assume they’re “too late” to Bitcoin because they didn’t buy at $200 or $2,000. But that’s the wrong framework.

Let’s look at where we really are:

– Bitcoin only recently got U.S.-approved ETFs (2024) — unlocking trillions in institutional capital.

– Most pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and insurance companies still hold zero Bitcoin.

– Most corporations don’t yet hold BTC on their balance sheets.

– And less than 1% of the global population owns a full Bitcoin.

The total global market for financial assets — stocks, bonds, real estate, gold, cash — exceeds $900 trillion. Bitcoin is currently hovering around $2 trillion.

Even a 2% global allocation to Bitcoin would send its market cap toward $18 trillion — putting it above gold and implying a per-coin price of £500,000+.

We’re not late. We’re still early.

Bitcoin Is Overtaking Giants — Without a CEO

Perhaps the most magical part of Bitcoin’s rise is this: it has no CEO, no board, no marketing department. No headquarters. No national flag.

Yet it’s now more valuable than:

– Google (Alphabet) — the gateway to the internet

– Silver — the original monetary metal

– Tesla, Visa, JPMorgan, Walmart, and thousands of other household names

This has never happened before in human history. An open-source project — maintained by volunteers and secured by miners — has outcompeted the biggest corporations in the world.

That’s not just impressive. It’s paradigm-shifting.

Bitcoin vs Gold: The Digital Upgrade

I firmly believe that Bitcoin is digital gold — and eventually, it will surpass physical gold in market cap.

Why?

– Gold is scarce, but not truly finite. More can be mined, albeit slowly.

– Bitcoin is absolutely scarce. The 21 million limit is final.

– Gold is hard to store, divide, and transport.

– Bitcoin can be stored in your head, divided into 100 million units, and moved globally in minutes.

Gold has a 5,000-year head start. Bitcoin has the internet, open-source software, and unstoppable code. It’s not replacing gold — it’s succeeding it.

The Takeaway: A Global Vote for New Money

Bitcoin’s rise is not a fluke.

It’s a global vote of no confidence in fiat systems, in central bank policy, and in financial institutions that have failed the average person.

At the same time, it’s a vote of confidence in a different kind of money — one that is transparent, decentralized, secure, and incorruptible.

We’re watching Bitcoin go from a fringe experiment to a globally recognized store of value. And even as it overtakes Google and silver, we must realize: we’re still just scratching the surface.

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News

Bitcoin isn’t just an exotic store-of-value anymore: it’s traded and held by governments, corporations, hedge funds, and even sovereign wealth vehicles.

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