It's going to be a real massacre.
There is a maxim in financial markets that always works: Follow the money. If you want more money, you have to follow it.
Forget about listening to what they say, let alone believing them. It's much easier: Do what they do. Or, in other words, follow the money.
It's harder to move forward when you've become the target. You don't know it, but a telescopic sight is following you wherever you go. But you can't see it, and you go through life in blissful ignorance, without even realising that you're a walking target.
The block reward is currently just 3,125 BTC. Institutional buyers are snapping up that amount without batting an eyelid. The tap is almost dry, barely dripping. They have to buy what has been issued, mainly held (+50%) by retail investors, carefully guarded. Big capital knows perfectly well that it has to buy your stack, little fish, and it's not going to do it when it reaches a million, it's going to do it when you think you've beaten them and happily retire to sleep your long-awaited winter. When you close your eyes to hibernate, you'll be dead. When you open them again, you'll realise your mistake. A mistake with multigenerational consequences. So much time spent slowly and stealthily stacking for nothing.
‘But the four-year cycles, Osj.’ Yes, of course. Did you study them thoroughly, in depth? I don't think so. Because you should have realised that they have always been aligned with global liquidity flows.
Without massive, uncontrolled printing, values do not grow explosively. If there was no surprisingly bullish growth, how on earth do you think there will be a massive fall? The second cannot happen without the first. That's how it works, always. Change the range and you can see it.
What I have just written in the previous paragraph is the view within a highly speculative market and does NOT take into account the concept behind big capital's arrival in Bitcoin, which is hedging against fiat currency devaluation and replacing junk money investments with sound money. To summarise, from a short-term speculative market perspective, there is no reason for them to send the price plummeting if it does not first rise significantly above the roof. From a value protection and portfolio migration perspective, where the arrival of liquidity is much less important, the process is underway and will not be stopped by you. No matter how much you have and how much you sell when you think the perfect moment has arrived, those with pockets of fiat money deeper than you could ever imagine will wipe you out without batting an eyelid, toasting their long-awaited double victory: Snatching Bitcoin from your hands that they cannot get anywhere else, while at the same time preparing for the race to save the value on development, knowing that they are late compared to the savvy retailer, but compensating for it with enormously deep fiat pockets.
Bitcoin, among many other things, has made it possible for the first time in history for everyone to achieve significant parabolic growth from the outset. However, large capital is unforgiving and will purchase its place to establish itself in the higher stacking volumes. As always. And you will allow this to happen, with the entrenched idea of ‘the four years.’

Bitcoin (BTC) - KGS
KGS 9.2264 M
6 months ago
0.00%
Mkt. Cap.
KGS 183,654.99 B
Vol. 24H
Ƀ 0
(KGS 0)
Open 24h
KGS 9.2264 M
Low/High 24h
KGS 9.2264 M
-
KGS 9.2264 M
Whitepaper
Launch Date
2009-01-03
Max Supply
20,999,999.98
Total Supply
19,905,281.00
Circulating Supply
19,905,281.00
Mkt. Cap. Penalty
0 %
Website
Consensus Mechanisms
Proof of Work
Hashing Algorithms
SHA-256
Block Nr.
909,816.00
Block Reward
3.13
Network H/s
953,550,778,332,102,700,000.00
Bitcoin is a decentralized cryptocurrency that uses peer-to-peer technology and a blockchain to record transactions. It was created by Satoshi Nakamoto and the first block was mined on January 3, 2009. Bitcoin transactions are recorded on a blockchain, which is a distributed ledger that can be accessed by anyone to verify transactions. Transactions are verified by miners, who are rewarded with a set amount of Bitcoin and transaction fees. The supply of Bitcoin is limited to 21 million coins and it is divisible to eight decimal places. A wallet is needed to use Bitcoin and it consists of a public key, which is used to send and receive payments, and a private key, which is used to control the wallet. Bitcoin can be used for a variety of purposes, including everyday transactions, as a store of value, or for investment.
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