$BTC This is not a price prediction, but a structural judgment.
If we only focus on the price curve, this might sound like an exaggerated slogan; but once we raise our perspective to consider the dimensions of currency, energy, systems, and time, this conclusion seems rather restrained, even conservative.
Bitcoin has never been the standard answer for 'risk assets.'
What it truly addresses is a more fundamental question: In a world where credit is continuously diluted, what can’t be arbitrarily increased?
In the past decades, the paths taken by major global economies have been highly consistent—
Debt expansion, monetary easing, and fiscal deficits becoming normalized.
This is not anyone's mistake, but an inherent choice of the modern system: when growth pressure and social stability coexist, 'printing money' is always the least painful option.
but Bitcoin stands precisely on the opposite side of this system.
It has no elastic adjustments, no human intervention, and does not even care about the macro cycle. The limit of 2100 million coins is not a marketing gimmick, but a cold, hard rule written into the code.
When you realize this, the anchor of the price changes.
A million dollars sounds high, but asking the question differently makes it clear:
If 1%-2% of the value of global assets chooses to be preserved in a form that cannot be increased, what should the pricing of Bitcoin be?
Let's look at it from another angle:
Today's Bitcoin has an annual new supply that is already lower than gold;
After several rounds of halving in the future, it will become the world's only value carrier with 'continuously decreasing new supply and complete transparency'.
The changes occurring on the demand side are often underestimated:
Institutions are not 'speculating on cryptocurrencies', but are looking for long-term allocations;
The country is not 'standing on the platform', but is rethinking asset sovereignty;
Individuals no longer see it merely as a speculative tool, but as a form of time savings.
When these forces act simultaneously, the price does not rise linearly, but is revalued in leaps.
So, a million dollars' worth of Bitcoin does not necessarily mean the world has become crazier,
it more likely means: the fiat currency system is continuing its pre-written script.
What is truly important has never been the number itself,
but when the price reaches that day, people suddenly find —
It is not that it has risen too much,
but we underestimated it, underestimated it for too long.



