📢‼️Someone in crypto owns around 1.1 MILLION Bitcoin. At today’s prices, that’s roughly $70,000,000,000.
And here’s the strange part…
Nobody knows who he is. The person behind those coins is the mysterious creator of Bitcoin, known only as Satoshi Nakamoto.
When Bitcoin launched in 2009, almost nobody cared about it. It was just a small experiment discussed on cryptography forums. During those early days, Satoshi was mining blocks almost alone. Later, researchers studying the blockchain noticed a very clear pattern in the first blocks ever mined — what’s now called the “Patoshi pattern.”
That pattern strongly suggests that a single miner produced thousands of those early blocks.
Most people believe that miner was Satoshi.
Which means he quietly accumulated around 1 million BTC before disappearing.
Then something even stranger happened.
In December 2010, Satoshi posted a final message online saying he had “moved on to other things.” After that… silence. No emails, no forum posts, no activity. He vanished from the internet.
And the coins?
They have never moved.
Not once.
To this day those wallets are still sitting on the blockchain, holding roughly 5% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist.
Over the years people have tried to guess who Satoshi might be. Some suspected cryptographers like Hal Finney or Nick Szabo. Others pointed to people like Adam Back, although he has denied being the creator.
But no one has ever proven it.
And that mystery might actually be one of the reasons Bitcoin worked.
No founder. No CEO. No person controlling the network.
Just code and a global community.
Still… there’s one question the entire crypto market thinks about sometimes.
Do you remember when El Salvador started buying Bitcoin while the market was crashing?
Today the country holds more than 6,100 BTC, worth roughly $460 MILLION at current prices.
Back then, a lot of economists said it was a historic mistake.
The man behind the decision was President Nayib Bukele. In 2021 he announced that El Salvador would make Bitcoin legal tender and start accumulating it as part of the country’s reserves. Most people thought it was reckless, especially because Bitcoin had already fallen hard from its highs.
But Bukele kept buying anyway.
The first purchases were a few hundred BTC, and then the government continued adding more during the 2021–2022 bear market. At one point the country was sitting on huge unrealized losses, which only made the criticism louder.
What’s funny is that Bukele leaned into the idea instead of backing off. At one point he even said the country would buy one Bitcoin every single day, basically dollar-cost-averaging like a retail investor… except it was a nation doing it.
Today El Salvador’s average purchase price is estimated to be around $42,000 per BTC. With the market where it is now, the country is sitting on hundreds of millions in unrealized profit.
And that’s not even the weirdest part.
El Salvador also started mining Bitcoin using geothermal energy from volcanoes, literally turning volcanic heat into $BTC .
So what once looked like a crazy gamble is now one of the most unusual national reserve strategies in the world.
Now I’m curious.
If your country announced tomorrow that it would start buying Bitcoin for its reserves… would you see it as a smart move for the future, or a massive risk?👇👇
🚨 Almost nobody talks about this. The U.S. government controls a massive amount of Bitcoin.
And here’s the crazy part: they didn’t buy it.
They seized it.
At one point, their wallets held more than 200,000 BTC.
Yes… over 200,000 Bitcoin.
At today’s prices that would be worth tens of billions of dollars.
Over the past decade U.S. authorities confiscated huge amounts of BTC from darknet markets, hackers and cybercrime investigations. One of the biggest moments came when the Department of Justice seized around 69,000 BTC linked to the Silk Road marketplace.
Those coins alone would now be worth billions.
Add several other seizures over the years, and the U.S. government quietly became one of the largest Bitcoin holders on the planet — holding more BTC than most companies, funds and even many early investors.
The irony is hard to ignore.
Bitcoin was designed to exist outside governments and banks yet one of the biggest Bitcoin wallets in the world ended up belonging to one.
Now the real question is:
Do you think governments will eventually hold Bitcoin as a strategic reserve…
or will they keep selling it whenever they seize it?👇
Everyone says they wish they had bought Bitcoin earlier.
But something funny happens every cycle: when the price starts going up people say it's already too expensive and they'll wait for a dip. Then the dip finally arrives… and suddenly it feels too risky to buy.
So the “perfect moment” everyone is waiting for somehow never appears.
Maybe the problem isn’t the market. Maybe the problem is that the best opportunities always feel uncomfortable in real time.
Just curious, when was the last time you actually bought during a real crash? Be honest: do you actually buy dips… or just say you will?👇👇👇
Most people imagine millions of small investors holding tiny pieces of BTC.
But when you look at the blockchain data, the picture becomes much more interesting.
A surprisingly small group of entities controls a massive amount of the total supply.
Some of them are obvious.
Others might surprise you.
For example:
• Satoshi Nakamoto alone is estimated to hold around 1,000,000 BTC. • Large custodians like Coinbase hold hundreds of thousands of BTC for institutions. • ETFs from companies like BlackRock and Fidelity have accumulated massive positions. • Governments even hold large amounts from confiscated coins.
When you add everything together, a relatively small group controls a huge share of the Bitcoin that will ever exist.
And since Bitcoin has a fixed supply of 21 million coins, every large holder matters.
Which raises an interesting question:
Do you think this concentration will increase over time… or will Bitcoin become more distributed as adoption grows?👇
🚨850,000 Bitcoin vanished overnight.🚨 At today’s prices, that would be worth tens of billions of dollars. And no, it didn’t happen because someone forgot a password or lost a hard drive. It happened inside what was once the largest Bitcoin exchange in the world. The platform was called Mt. Gox. Back then it wasn’t just another exchange. Around 70% of all Bitcoin trading on the planet was happening there. If you owned BTC in those early days, there was a very good chance your coins were sitting on Mt. Gox. Then one day people tried to withdraw their Bitcoin… and nothing happened. At first users thought it was just a technical issue. Maybe the servers were overloaded, maybe the platform was under maintenance. But hours turned into days… and days turned into weeks. Eventually the company admitted something almost impossible to believe: 850,000 Bitcoin were missing. Just gone. Shortly after that, the exchange filed for bankruptcy and thousands of people learned a brutal lesson that crypto investors still repeat today: “Not your keys, not your coins.” More than ten years later, the collapse of Mt. Gox is still one of the wildest chapters in crypto history. And somewhere out there, there are probably still people explaining how they once owned Bitcoin… until an exchange collapse changed everything. What about you? Do you keep your crypto on exchanges or in your own wallet?
This might be one of the most important charts almost nobody is paying attention to right now.
S&P 500 on the top. Yield curve in the middle. Fed funds rate at the bottom.
Almost 30 years of market history in one image. Before every major downturn over the last decades, the same pattern appeared: • The market pushes to new highs • The yield curve inverts • The Fed eventually starts cutting rates We saw this before the Dot-com bubble, the Global Financial Crisis, and the 2020 crash. Now look at today. The S&P 500 is again near all-time highs. The yield curve recently came out of one of the deepest inversions in history. And the Fed has started cutting rates from the highest levels since 2007. History doesn’t always repeat. But it often rhymes.
And the big question is: If this pattern has repeated for decades… why is the market still going up?👇
🎮 Vitalik Buterin didn't originally plan to create Ethereum. In fact, the idea started with a video game. When Vitalik was a teenager he spent a lot of time playing World of Warcraft. One day, Blizzard — the game’s developer — decided to change the abilities of one of his favorite characters. To most players it was just another update. To Vitalik, it was something bigger. He later said that moment made him realize how fragile centralized systems are. One company could change the rules overnight… and millions of players just had to accept it. That idea stuck with him. A few years later, at just 19 years old, Vitalik published a whitepaper proposing something radical: a decentralized platform where no single company could control the rules. That project became Ethereum. Today Ethereum secures hundreds of billions of dollars, powers thousands of applications, and helped create entire industries like DeFi and NFTs. All because a video game character got nerfed. Sometimes the biggest revolutions start with the smallest frustrations. Follow for more crypto stories on the road to 2030. $ETH $BTC #Crypto #Ethereum #Blockchain #Web3
🚨 BREAKING: A fake Ledger Live app on the Apple App Store is reportedly draining Bitcoin wallets.
One victim, musician G. Love, says he lost his entire retirement fund after downloading the malicious app while setting up his wallet on a new computer.
Blockchain investigator ZachXBT tracked at least 5.92 BTC already moving to laundering addresses. Another victim reportedly lost 4.15 BTC.
The fake app perfectly imitates the real Ledger interface. Users enter their seed phrase… and their Bitcoin disappears within seconds.
Reminder: your seed phrase should only ever be entered on your hardware wallet device. Never in an app. Never on a website.
Everyone says they’re a long-term investor. But the moment their coin goes +40%, they start thinking about selling. They take profits, feel like geniuses… and then the coin goes +400% without them.
Yes — twelve trillion dollars. No, I didn’t add extra zeros. I also had to read that number twice.
That’s roughly how much money Charles Schwab manages.
If you’re not familiar with them, Schwab is one of the largest brokerage firms in the world. Millions of traditional investors use it to buy stocks, ETFs and manage their portfolios.
And today its CEO, Rick Wurster, quietly made a move into crypto.
Schwab has opened a crypto trading waitlist and plans to offer direct trading for $BTC and $ETH to its clients.
If even a tiny fraction of those twelve trillion dollars eventually flows into crypto… today’s prices might look very different in a few years.🚀