@Bedrock Most people are asking the wrong question about Bitcoin.
They want to know how much it can go up, what the next target is, or whether the cycle still has room to run.
But price has never been the most interesting part of an asset.
The more important question is what happens to capital after it enters the system.
That is where the real shift is taking place.
We're moving away from a market where value is simply stored and toward one where value can remain productive without leaving its original position behind.
The change is not about chasing yield.
It's about reducing the gap between ownership and utility.
Protocols exploring this direction are pushing a different idea: capital doesn't have to choose between being secure and being useful.
And that changes where value accumulates.
The winners may not be the assets themselves, but the $BR infrastructure that helps those assets participate across multiple layers of the market.
Of course, opportunity alone is not enough.
As capital becomes more mobile, trust becomes more important.
Users need transparency. They need predictable risk. They need systems they can understand, not just numbers that look attractive on a dashboard.
That's why I think the next stage of crypto won't be defined by who holds the most capital.
It will be defined by who can make capital move efficiently without making users sacrifice confidence along the way.#bedrock $BR

