Macro: Fiat Is the Weak Link
If Bitcoin is sound money, fiat is increasingly unsound. The U.S. federal debt ballooned $13 trillion in five years, now sitting at $36.2 trillion. Annual interest payments? Nearly $1 trillion — the fourth-largest line item in the federal budget.
And here’s the kicker: interest costs are now outpacing GDP growth. That’s like running on a treadmill that speeds up every minute while you get more tired. Eventually, you fall.
Against that backdrop, $Bitcoin looks less like a speculative toy and more like an insurance policy — the hardest asset in an age of monetary softness.
Perfect Storm, Perfect Setup
So here’s where we stand:
Supply locked.
Institutions hoarding.
Macro cracking.
Miners trickle out 450 $BTC daily while institutions routinely hoover up multiples of that in hours. The imbalance isn’t theoretical anymore — it’s visible on-chain.
Bitwise’s $1.3M by 2035 might sound outrageous, but the setup is simple math plus simple human behavior. Scarcity, meet greed.
Perfect Storm, Perfect Setup
So here’s where we stand:
Supply locked.
Institutions hoarding.
Macro cracking.
Miners trickle out 450 $BTC daily while institutions routinely hoover up multiples of that in hours. The imbalance isn’t theoretical anymore — it’s visible on-chain.
Bitwise’s $1.3M by 2035 might sound outrageous, but the setup is simple math plus simple human behavior. Scarcity, meet greed.