Is Bitcoin Really Going to $0? Let’s Talk Facts
Every market cycle, especially during sharp corrections, one question resurfaces: Is Bitcoin going to zero? It’s a bold claim—but history tells a different story.
Since its launch in 2009, Bitcoin has survived exchange collapses, regulatory crackdowns, media skepticism, bans in multiple countries, and several brutal bear markets where it dropped over 70–80%. Yet each time, it recovered and eventually reached new highs. Why? Because Bitcoin isn’t just a price chart—it’s a decentralized network secured by miners, supported by developers, adopted by institutions, and held by millions worldwide.
For Bitcoin to reach $0, global demand would have to completely disappear, the network would need to stop functioning, and every holder would have to lose confidence simultaneously. Considering its growing institutional adoption, ETF participation, and role as “digital gold,” that scenario appears extremely unlikely.
Volatility? Yes. Corrections? Absolutely. Zero? History suggests otherwise.
Markets move in cycles, but strong fundamentals tend to endure.
$BTC ,
$ETH ,
$BNB ,
#BTC ,
#BTC0usd