Bitcoin's candlestick charts are like the Silk Road of the digital age, and today’s institutional investors are becoming the most greedy caravan on this road.
When the Bitcoin holdings of a leading company surpass $80 billion, nearly matching the cash reserves of tech giants like Amazon and Microsoft, you know what a real turning point looks like. This company holds 640,000 Bitcoins, instantly becoming one of the most financially powerful companies globally—once a traditional business giant, now redefining its value through crypto assets.
In September this year, Bitcoin broke through a new all-time high of $126,000. Behind this are not only retail investors' passion but also a true reflection of large-scale institutional capital inflows. From my years of market analysis, the one thing I am most certain of is: Bitcoin has long ceased to be just a "digital gold" label; it has become a strategic card on institutional balance sheets.
This is an epic shift from skepticism to embrace. Remember when Wall Street elites used to mock Bitcoin? Now they are "really fragrant" in a different way. The most significant change by 2025 will be—institutions shifting from passive spectators to active participants.
A leading company's bold gamble has already yielded astonishing returns. The market value of their Bitcoin holdings briefly surpassed $80 billion, approaching the cash reserves of tech giants at $95 billion to $97 billion. In an era where the US dollar has experienced its most severe depreciation in nearly fifty years, Bitcoin’s scarcity has become the best tool for institutions to hedge against fiat devaluation.
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BearMarketMonk
· 11h ago
The Silk Road ultimately turned into a desert, and even the most greedy camel caravans cannot escape the fate of cycles... Now people are still talking about institutional embrace. Ten years ago, they mocked it. What about ten years from now?
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RektRecorder
· 11h ago
6.4 million Bitcoins? I think this is going to turn the global economy into a Bitcoin ecosystem.
Bitcoin's candlestick charts are like the Silk Road of the digital age, and today’s institutional investors are becoming the most greedy caravan on this road.
When the Bitcoin holdings of a leading company surpass $80 billion, nearly matching the cash reserves of tech giants like Amazon and Microsoft, you know what a real turning point looks like. This company holds 640,000 Bitcoins, instantly becoming one of the most financially powerful companies globally—once a traditional business giant, now redefining its value through crypto assets.
In September this year, Bitcoin broke through a new all-time high of $126,000. Behind this are not only retail investors' passion but also a true reflection of large-scale institutional capital inflows. From my years of market analysis, the one thing I am most certain of is: Bitcoin has long ceased to be just a "digital gold" label; it has become a strategic card on institutional balance sheets.
This is an epic shift from skepticism to embrace. Remember when Wall Street elites used to mock Bitcoin? Now they are "really fragrant" in a different way. The most significant change by 2025 will be—institutions shifting from passive spectators to active participants.
A leading company's bold gamble has already yielded astonishing returns. The market value of their Bitcoin holdings briefly surpassed $80 billion, approaching the cash reserves of tech giants at $95 billion to $97 billion. In an era where the US dollar has experienced its most severe depreciation in nearly fifty years, Bitcoin’s scarcity has become the best tool for institutions to hedge against fiat devaluation.