Just pulled a mini-Michael Saylor move with my one-man company: • Collateralized my BTC • Borrowed USD • Bought a new miner • And oops… "accidentally" stacked even more sats with the leftovers into the company treasury wallet Now officially running a one-man Bitcoin Treasury Company ₿ There are no brakes on this train. 🚂 #Bitcoin #StrategyForSingles
Peter Schiff predicts Bitcoin will fall to $10,000. If that happens, I would agree that Bitcoin is dead. Why? Bitcoin is a network of people. Over time, more and more people understand the concept and choose to participate. At the same time, many people invest in Bitcoin purely to get more fiat. They drop out during bear markets and often lose fiat as well. But those who truly understand it keep going — they continue to save in Bitcoin and invest time in understanding it even better. That is why the power law, and especially the bottom price, works so well. It is simply the result of how many people are dedicated to the network and understand what this is really about. Today, the bottom price is $50,215. Historically, Bitcoin has never traded below this power‑law bottom. Will the price go down to that level? Unlikely — but never below it. There are simply too many dedicated Bitcoiners for that. https://charts.bitbo.io/long-term-power-law/
Christmas dinner conversation: Relative: You can’t keep all your money in Bitcoin. It’s way too volatile. Me: It’s not volatile at all. If I own 1 Bitcoin, I own 1⁄21 million of all the Bitcoin that will ever exist. That doesn’t change. Relative: But the price has dropped a lot lately. You must be paying much more for things now. Me: True—I pay about 30% more compared to the peak. But I also earned about 30% more Bitcoin from my December salary than I did in September. Perspective matters. Bitcoin is volatile in fiat terms—not in supply.