If every person in the world held 1 FET 🤔 the price would almost certainly be higher than today, since there are only about 1 billion FET available. $FET
Here’s why I’m bullish on crypto: 1.6 million bank accounts were hacked in France today. With self-custody crypto, I’d have slept fine. The future is decentralized — so why would I sell? $BTC $FET
I think Bitcoin is going to drop back to $50k 🤔 — maybe $45k, or even lower. It will all depend on one thing: investors. But let’s be honest… don’t fool yourselves, you don’t want it anymore lol 🥲
There’s a fundamental problem: you can’t even sell 200 BTC — the market simply doesn’t have enough liquidity. Having a lot is cool, but liquidity is the real issue. You think you’re rich… but deep down, you’re not 🤣 $FET $BTC
FET is going to crash below $0.10 😩, that’s almost guaranteed… Maybe it will stabilize around $0.08. Why? Because there’s still nothing truly functional today. I believed in it, but I was wrong. $FET
Americans can’t mock Europe and then later say, ‘Oh but you know, we’ll just keep selling our phones, our Google, and our Amazon like nothing happened.’ No. Absolutely not. You asked for this. $BTC $FET #crypto
Important note for investors – How exits really work in the crypto market
Many investors believe that when people “sell Bitcoin”, they immediately exit into dollars or euros. In reality, this almost never happens. The real exit path usually looks like this: BTC → ALTCOIN → USDT / USDC → (sometimes) FIAT Here is why this matters. 1. Most selling stays inside the crypto system When someone sells: • BTC → ETH • BTC → FET • BTC → SHIB No real money leaves the market.
This is only: one crypto exchanged for another risk transferred, not removed No dollars, no euros, no banks involved. This creates an illusion of strong liquidity, but it is only internal.
2. Altcoins are used as a liquidity buffer Large holders rarely sell BTC directly into stablecoins. Instead they: • Sell BTC into altcoins (high liquidity, less visible) • Let altcoins pump temporarily • Then convert altcoins into USDT / USDC
This allows them to: reduce impact on Bitcoin price distribute selling pressure exit progressively without crashing the market too early Altcoins often act as a liquidity buffer.
3. The real danger is not BTC selling — it is stablecoin conversion
The real stress begins when people try to convert: ALT → USDT / USDC → USD / EUR (bank) At that moment: • Stablecoin reserves are tested • Banks slow down or block transfers • Withdrawals are limited
Confidence becomes fragile If many investors try to exit to fiat at the same time: • Liquidity disappears • Prices collapse quickly
Exchanges may freeze withdrawals This is where systemic risk appears.
4. Key conclusion Crypto markets remain stable because: Most investors never truly leave the system. They rotate: • BTC → alt • alt → stable • stable → alt / BTC
But very few actually convert into real fiat money. The market is liquid as long as money does not try to leave the casino. Final message Bitcoin and altcoins are highly liquid inside crypto
Real fiat liquidity is limited Massive exits to banks would cause violent price collapses
Understanding this mechanism is essential for proper risk management. That’s why Shiba, and about 80% of altcoins, are no longer profitable. You think it’s a pump, but in reality it’s just Bitcoin exits flowing into altcoins. $BTC #crypto
Europe went into debt to invest in American tech assets that could have been developed in Europe. Nothing was stopping it — it was purely political. Today, the situation is different.