Most people looking at crypto right now are still tracking price rotation.
What I’ve been paying attention to instead is where previously inactive capital is starting to move.
For years, Bitcoin holders behaved in a very predictable way. Accumulate, hold, do nothing. Large amounts of BTC essentially sat outside the broader on-chain economy because the incentive to move simply wasn’t strong enough.
That behavior looks like it’s changing.
What stands out to me with @Bedrock isn’t the staking narrative itself. It’s the possibility that protocols like this are quietly turning dormant Bitcoin liquidity into productive financial capital without forcing holders to fully abandon core BTC exposure.
Markets usually underestimate these transitions because they keep pricing tokens based on current activity, not behavioral shifts happening underneath.
Once inactive capital starts developing utility, the entire liquidity structure begins changing.
This isn’t really about staking anymore.
It’s about Bitcoin slowly becoming active infrastructure.


Market looks
