Capital markets are funding the AI buildout at historic scale: ~$400B over 6 months. Bitcoin ETFs have seen ~$4B of outflows since May 14, pressuring $BTC. This is a capital rotation, not a Bitcoin impairment. Volatility creates opportunity.
The worst part of this bitcoin:native bear market is that I can’t make money fast enough to buy these dips. But brother, I AM THRILLED to buy at the 60-70k region.
A good psychological trick for long term bitcoin:native accumulators:
Incrementally stack .01 at a time, send it to cold storage, and repeat the process.
If your goal is to reach 1.0, each incremental step is tangible progress.
The dollar price is fake, denote your units correctly.
UNPOPULAR TAKE: For most, trying to orangepill your friends and relatives is a massive waste of time.
Normies be design are conditioned to be risk-averse laggards. Nothing you can say in the short term will ever overcome the years of fiat conditioning.
That is why they cannot help but see you as delusion, a crazy person. You see things that they have yet to comprehend; and thats part of the price of admission.
They're happy with 4-10% in traditional vehicles (mutual funds, 401ks managed by their employers, real estate equity), but are blissfully unaware that real money supply expansion brings those returns to abysmal at best - negative at worst.
Buy you, yes YOU, dear bitcoiner - have executed proof-of-work. You've done the math, shaken the conditioning, and are actively staking a claim in the worlds truly finite monetary system.
The journey is lonely and you will even begin to question yourself; but the convicted are always rewarded in the end.
Do not let naysayers or bears shake you out from your position - if they can't explain what a difficulty adjustment does to the network, consider their opinions a wash.
Their disposition is entirely controlled by a desire to cash out scarcity for more fiat, wholeheartedly against capital accumulators like you or I.
As for your loved ones and your friends, they will not understand in the short term. Save yourself the hassle and if you really care, dedicate a small DCA buy for them on their behalf.
In 5-10 years time, they'll understand that you were right.
DYOR/NFA
Degen leverage is just gas on the fire. When this bear market concludes, it will be sudden, it will be violent, and it wont leave any mercy for those who choose to short the world's best performing asset.
Don't play with leverage.
In times where you want to FOMO in, typically best to slow down and have a mild DCA. Vice versa, when it feels awful, that probably means you should be buying more.
This is the long game, don't fuck it up. bitcoin:native
There are 7x more Bitcoin shorts than longs right now with $10-12 billion in short liquidation leverage sitting between here and $84,000.
Would be an absolute shame if they get liquidated and the bear market comes to end.
Credit: @seth_fin
if youre 30-40 something on this site, and you see young men chastised by retarded bootstrap baby boomers for lamenting the vanishing opportunities they had, to get a job, a home, start a family, and you side with the boomers? i view you as lower than a pathetic worthless worm
Peter Schiff afirma que el hecho de que Saylor haya amortizado 1.300 millones de dólares en deuda convertible es una señal de que Saylor está "bajo mucha presión entre bastidores" y de que "el negocio de MSTR se está desmoronando".
Entonces si Saylor paga sus deudas es malo si se endeuda también 😂😂😂
Si Saylor compra Bitcoin es malo, si vende es malo y si holdea también.
Si Saylor hace lo que hacen muchas empresas: Emitir preferentes, vender acciones, tomar deuda o pagar deudas etc es malo también.
Saylor tiene 62 billones en BTC vs 6.754 billones en deuda.
Es decir esta 9 veces sobre colateralizado sobre lo que debe y eso que estamos en "Bear Market"
Si MSTR baja como cualquier accion es malo y si sube es burbuja especulativa.
Learning $BTC is a rabbit hole that doesn’t end with the asset itself.
You start seeing things that force you to forget everything you were ever taught.
History, money, politics, technology — and so much more.
I can’t stop thinking about it.