Bitcoin's 'super cycle' is not a myth, but a transfer of power! Stop viewing today's Bitcoin through the lens of 2017. The so-called 'super cycle' is not a狂欢 prophecy of prices soaring to $300,000, but a silent power transition—from retail speculators to Wall Street, sovereign funds, and multinational corporations' balance sheets.
In the past, Bitcoin's four-year cycle was driven by miner halvings, leveraged liquidations, and FOMO sentiment; today, Bank of America alone poured $383 million in a single transaction, MicroStrategy holds a BTC position worth $6 billion, and ETF daily net inflows dwarf new mining supply. On-chain data shows institutional buying has surpassed miner output by 76%, and the market has already entered a new reality of 'supply shortage'.
This is not a replay of a bull market, but a fundamental restructuring of asset attributes. When Bitcoin becomes a macro tool to hedge against declining dollar credibility, debt expansion, and geopolitical risks, its volatility logic no longer belongs to technical analysts on K-line charts, but to Federal Reserve rate decisions and Treasury balance sheets. Retail investors are still watching charts and guessing tops and bottoms, while giants have already embedded it into the foundational configuration of century-long wealth transfer.
So don't ask 'Is it still possible to get on board?'—ask instead: In this new cycle, dominated by institutional capital, are you still using an old map to find a new continent?
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