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#BTC110KSoon? BITCOIN, CRYPTOCURRENCIES: why the PRICE can climb
Analysts warn of a possible scenario of uncontrolled issuance and explain how this would consolidate Bitcoin as the ultimate safe-haven asset.
Digital Economy
09/06/2025 • 6:07 AM • Digital Economy
The American political scene was once again shaken by an unexpected statement: Donald Trump, usually associated with conservative views, declared himself in favor of completely eliminating the debt ceiling in the United States. Thus, the "paradise" that the United States represents for many investors, as the world's leading economic power, appears seriously threatened.
In his words, this limit "should be eliminated completely to avoid an economic catastrophe." Although it was interpreted as a nod to Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, it holds a potential for much greater impact than it appears. And at the center of the debate is Bitcoin.
The Trump effect on Bitcoin
The debt ceiling is, in essence, a legal barrier imposed by the U.S. Congress that restricts the total amount of federal government borrowing.
From the markets' perspective, its elimination would be equivalent to granting the Treasury unlimited debt issuance authority. In practical terms, this would allow Trump to finance himself indefinitely and the Federal Reserve to expand its balance sheet to absorb such obligations if necessary.
This would be, nothing more and nothing less, a carte blanche to increase the monetary base as public spending demands. Recent history has been a master of this: global monetary expansion cycles tend to benefit assets with limited supply and no dependence on authorities, as is precisely the case with Bitcoin.
In this hypothetical scenario – for now, limited to a Trump post on Truth Social – the leading digital asset strengthens as a strategic hedge against the systemic risk of the dollar and a potential inflationary spiral.
What is the 'debt ceiling' and its impact on Bitcoin?
"Unlike national currencies, whose issuance is subject to the political decisions of central banks, Bitcoin has an immutable monetary policy: its total supply is strictly limited to 21 million units," notes market analyst Emiliano Luque.
And he adds: "If the debt ceiling in the United States is eliminated, the incentives to acquire BTC will rise. With a government free to borrow, pressure on the Federal Reserve to monetize that debt would be constant, which could fuel new inflationary cycles," Luque adds.
Bitcoin: Time to Buy?
The recent scandalous fight between Donald Trump and Elon Musk (the latter even accused him of being on pedophile Jeffrey Epstein's list) does not seem to have impacted the price of Bitcoin, whose value at the time of writing reaches $106,000 on Binance.
For market analyst Iván Bolé, "since it lost $109,000, Bitcoin has been on a bearish corrective path." The expert points out that "the drop to that level marked the breaking of the upward trend that began on April 7 and lasted two months straight, reaching a direct rise of around 50%.
In Bolé's opinion, "the correction isn't even over yet. It's still phase 1. We had a 50% rise and a 15% correction."
However, confirmation of Trump's move could add an element to the technical analysis and boost prices. Perhaps even reaching an all-time high of $112,000, a 10% increase. This could also be due to increased demand for the main digital currency due to technological issues that go beyond monetary considerations.
The Bitcoin network, originally conceived as a peer-to-peer digital cash system, is undergoing a new test of the law. During the month of May, the number of "OP_RETURN" transactions increased exponentially, reaching 13,325.
"OP_RETURN is an instruction within the Bitcoin programming language that allows arbitrary data—such as text or even images—to be included within a transaction. This represents a 443-fold increase compared to the number of such transactions observed between January and April," explains Héctor Lucero, a blockchain technology expert.
The data, revealed by a Knots node runner known on the X network as "Ghost of Unhosted Marcellus", paints a picture of the network that goes beyond simple value transfer.
"Transactions that exceed this limit or include multiple OP_RETURN outputs are categorized as 'non-standard' and are typically rejected by nodes that adhere to these policies," Lucero expands.
Only miners who include them directly in a block, usually in exchange for higher fees, manage to have them registered. The node operator emphasized that the May phenomenon was not only quantitative, but also qualitative.
While between January and April only "one transaction with 10 OP_RETURN outputs" was recorded, in May this figure skyrocketed to 282. This reveals greater creativity in the use of the network for various purposes.
Lucero emphasizes one particular fact: "Surprisingly, the majority of these 'non-standard' transactions were included in blocks mined by the MARA Holdings (MARA) pool." The company is known for its Slipstream service, which makes it easy for users to include these types of transactions in Bitcoin in exchange for additional fees.
All of this puts pressure on quotes, but also on an old discussion in the community: should the network be limited to the transmission of monetary value or can it expand its function to store other types of information?