The best way to think about Bitcoin is to imagine it’s the year 1900 and someone just introduced electricity to your town. They tell you, “This new thing — electricity — is going to power hospitals, cars, planes, trains, homes, schools, and even become part of your education.”
Naturally, your first question is: What does this mean for me?
It might sound intimidating or exciting — but either way, it deserves your attention.
Bitcoin is similar. It’s a paradigm shift. Just as electricity was physical energy, Bitcoin is digital energy. You probably didn’t expect to see something like it in your lifetime, but it’s here — and it will touch every part of society in the years to come.
Back then, people had decades to grasp the full impact of electricity. With Bitcoin, the timeline is shorter — maybe a decade. It’s new, complex, and sometimes overwhelming. But it’s also full of opportunity.
Everyone can benefit from it, but to do so, it’s worth taking the time to really understand it. Only then can you fully appreciate the value it brings.
What I really appreciate about Bitcoin is its ambition - the drive to reach billions of people and serve as a secure, sound, and sovereign way to store value right on their phones.
If you want to understand where Bitcoin is heading, just run a simple thought experiment. Look at your friends and family — what are they buying today? Are they buying overpriced tech stocks with 50x P/E ratios? Are they pouring money into properties in second-tier cities, or chasing assets that the wealthy already accumulated a decade ago?
Now ask yourself — would you buy those same things, even if you had the money? If you think critically for even an hour, you’d likely conclude: no. You’d spot the flaws.
Next, invert the experiment. What are you buying? If you’re buying Bitcoin, is there an information or understanding gap between you and those around you? Most likely, yes.
Now ask: will they eventually buy Bitcoin in the next 2, 5, 10, or 15 years? I believe so. Once the media normalizes it, once influencers and financial pundits give them a comforting narrative, they’ll follow. It’s just a matter of time.
So here’s the conclusion: I wouldn’t buy what they’re buying now, but I can see them buying what I hold in the future — Bitcoin. That’s a clear signal. The future of Bitcoin is strong, and it’s still early.
What is the future of Bitcoin ?
- Banks will start lending against your Bitcoin
- United States government will hold Bitcoin
- Big tech companies will embrace Bitcoin
- You will have Bitcoin on your iPhone & Android device
Prepare accordingly

It is so true.

Bitcoin is going to a million — it’s not a question of if, but when.
People kick themselves when they realize all they had to do was buy Bitcoin, forget about it, and hold for 10 years.
They look back and think, “It was so simple. I could’ve done that & how did I miss it?”
The irony? That’s still all they have to do today.
But how many actually will?
I’ve tried my best to convey it to all my friends. I hope I’ve ignited some interest for them to look deeper in to Bitcoin & consider a major allocation.
Liquidity and Sentiment Are Shifting in Bitcoin’s Favor.
On the liquidity front, global M2 money supply began rising again in Q1 2025 after nearly two years of stagnation. This turnaround follows dovish pivots from central banks in Europe, China, and eventually the U.S. Inflation has cooled, recession risks have increased, and policymakers are starting to ease again. As a result, global liquidity is now trending positive—a key condition for the start of a Bitcoin bull phase.
On the sentiment front, the copper/gold ratio has reached levels that previously marked business cycle bottoms—in 2016, 2020, and now again in 2025. Investor positioning remains defensive, and economic pessimism is widespread. Historically, environments like these have preceded sharp reversals in macro sentiment—and in Bitcoin price action.
When liquidity returns and macro fear peaks, Bitcoin typically front-runs the policy shift. That’s exactly what appears to be starting again, just as we saw in 2016 and 2020.

Bitcoin’s muted price movement in early 2025 isn’t a sign of weakness — it’s a classic lagging response to improving macro liquidity conditions.
If global liquidity continues to rise and sentiment improves (as all indicators currently suggest), then Bitcoin’s next move isn’t just upward—it could be parabolic.
Bitcoin is expected to reach around $444K by June 2026, $1M in early 2027, and $5M by 2031.
Go for it.
Bitcoin doesn't pay you — it frees you. It protects your time, your energy, and your purchasing power from inflation and theft.
An asset isn’t defined by whether it gives you fiat crumbs every month. Bitcoin is an asset because it holds and grows purchasing power without trusting anyone. It’s the foundation of financial sovereignty, not a rental yield spreadsheet.
One of Bitcoin’s most underrated qualities is that no one has to lose for it to win. That’s what makes it truly unique—and why it’s positioned to keep winning over the next two decades.
Bitcoin is gradually absorbing value(monetary premium) from other long-term stores of wealth—bonds, real estate, and gold. But it’s not replacing them through conflict or competition; it’s absorbing the premium, the trust, and the capital they once held.
What’s common among those asset classes? They’re all fragmented and disorganized. No one’s united over a New York apartment or a Kansas farmland. No one rallies behind a corporate bond. But Bitcoin has a global, aligned, and mission-driven community—intelligent, principled, and organized. And you can’t beat a coordinated force with a scattered one.
That’s why Bitcoin is becoming the apex asset. Not by fighting others, but by simply being better—and doing it organized.
In a world where physical cash was common, people naturally turned to real estate—land, apartments, and agricultural property—as their preferred store of value. It was a tax-advantaged way to preserve wealth, thanks to the untraceable nature of cash transactions.
But in today’s digital economy, where everything is trackable and money is mostly digital, the dynamics have shifted. In this new era of traceability and regulation, moving large amounts into digital equities becomes cumbersome and taxable. Governments can impose holding taxes, and every transfer can be monitored and charged.
That’s why Bitcoin stands out. It’s digital property that you can self-custody, giving you unmatched sovereignty, mobility, and privacy. It’s scarce, borderless, and not easily taxed just for holding. Over the next decade, as these trends play out, moving long-term capital into Bitcoin will seem like the obvious choice—because it is.
It’s no longer the homeowner who carries prestige into the future — it’s the Bitcoin Whole Coiner.
If you’re paying attention, it’s clear that rent moratoriums are poised to return in a big way across several political jurisdictions. The signs are all there. When you understand the growing theme of fiscal dominance and political instability shaping the next decade, rent moratoriums aren’t just possible—they’re inevitable. And when they come, they’ll hit hard.
Capital—of every kind—is concentrated in the United States: top-tier real estate, intellectual property, risk capital, you name it. The U.S. has historically attracted global capital because of its economic dominance and stability, and most of that capital resides in dollar-denominated assets.
But now, the message from the U.S. is changing. It’s becoming more protectionist: restricting tourism, student visas, foreign property investment, and access to capital markets. Tariffs and geopolitical tensions are signaling a clear message—don’t come here. Whether it’s people or capital, the U.S. is becoming less welcoming.
So what happens when the world’s premier destination for capital effectively shuts its doors? Investors begin to withdraw. But where does that capital go? There isn’t another country today that offers the same scale of economic security, infrastructure, and opportunity. Maybe there will be in the next 10 to 20 years—but not yet.
In the meantime, capital is shifting from physical, jurisdiction-bound assets to digital, borderless ones. We are entering a new era where capital moves to cyberspace. The digital asset of choice? Bitcoin.
This is the great migration—from physical capital to digital capital. From the old world to a new, open, and decentralized one.
Eventually, everyone falls in line — it’s just a matter of time. I believe there’s a massive wave of capital set to flow into Bitcoin over the next 5 to 10 years. The good news? You’re still early. The bad news? It might hit $500,000 per coin before firms like J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs decide it’s acceptable for the masses to own it.
If you have one truly great idea, you don’t need a second one.
Bitcoin is the greatest idea of this decade.
The issue with focusing on crypto, Web3, DeFi, staking, and proof-of-stake networks is that they represent an opportunity cost when Bitcoin itself hasn’t reached equilibrium with the broader market. Bitcoin is still significantly undervalued relative to global asset classes, and there’s a long way to go before it’s fully integrated into the financial system.
Until Bitcoin is properly priced—when volatility stabilizes and it’s widely adopted—the real value lies in Bitcoin and the ecosystem forming around it. This decade is about entrenching Bitcoin in the financial system. That’s where the money is: either in Bitcoin itself or in leveraged plays around it, like Bitcoin treasury companies.
Once Bitcoin reaches parity with gold or becomes a foundational layer of global finance, then it might make sense to explore other crypto opportunities. But until then, the clearest path to long-term wealth is simple: be in Bitcoin.
