54534653790 Why does MicroStrategy keep buying as it rises? Why will Bitcoin keep rising? What kind of game are Wall Street capital and American politicians playing with the crypto market?

MicroStrategy's CEO, Michael Saylor, claims he will never sell a single Bitcoin, and since Bitcoin doesn't pay dividends like stocks, his profit model will certainly leverage existing Bitcoins for collateral to cash out greater profits. Currently, Bitcoin is about $108,000 each, while MicroStrategy's overall acquisition cost is $70,000 each. If MicroStrategy needs money in the future, it can simply pledge its Bitcoins to obtain cash, so he is not afraid at all.

The game that America is playing is similar; they keep relaxing regulations on stablecoins, continuously minting various stablecoins to inflate the crypto market's market value. The issued stablecoins can be deemed as created out of thin air, while we need to spend various fiat currencies to buy them, which means we are essentially using our real money to buy a bunch of air. Once we lose everything, the capital transfer is complete.

The scale of U.S. debt has already surpassed historical highs, and the primary goal of the Trump administration was to reduce debt. Clearly, Trump has set his sights on Bitcoin as a tool. The U.S. debt now stands at $38 trillion, while Bitcoin's market value is currently only around $2 trillion. So if he really wants to use the crypto market to solve the U.S. debt problem, this market bubble needs to expand several times. In this view, $150,000 or $200,000 for Bitcoin is not impossible.

Fortunately, this stage, although there are already obvious signals, may not have truly arrived yet. Everything is in place, just waiting for the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates as the tailwind. In the next three months, we must buy the dip and hold enough chips to wait for the price to rise.