My personal opinion is that if Trump's views on the dollar's liquidity cost remain the same as during his first term.
Then Bitcoin should be able to see a price of 100,000 to 130,000 per coin.
Moreover, US capital is trying to seize pricing power of Bitcoin through ETFs, competing with whales.
If US dollar liquidity is really flooding, and we need to control inflation in the US, it might directly send Bitcoin soaring.
So the question arises, is it certain that investing in Bitcoin and other virtual currencies will make money?
Not necessarily.
First of all, trading of virtual assets like Bitcoin is prohibited in our country, from a regulatory and legal perspective, your rights are not protected, posing significant risks for ordinary investors.
Secondly, assuming Bitcoin rises from 87000 to 110000 USD, what is the increase? 26.4%. To be honest, 26.4% is not even as good as the A-shares after September 24. So so-called BTC influencers generally recommend you to do futures or contracts.
These are all leveraged, and leverage is powerless against spike markets.
The Bitcoin bull market will likely be filled with spike markets around 10,000 USD, which is a severe test for your leverage—especially during US time zones; you can't stay awake every day, can you?
So, there might be a Bitcoin bull market, but whether your contract bought at 87000 can avoid liquidation is another matter.
After all, when I denied the value theory of Bitcoin and other virtual currencies at over 60,000 USD, the people opposing me have already changed from the ones who criticized my understanding in previous years. This batch of virtual retail investors likely finished liquidating when it fell from 60,000 to over 20,000, even though I roughly predicted at 60,000.
If rates are to fall below 30,000, I believe they won't be watching either.
Comment 168, get on board!!!
Impermanence brings impermanence brings impermanence!!!
Important things need to be said three times!!