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Konqueror
npub19n50...7fny
Freshly unplugged
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Konqueror 2 months ago
This is my favorite chart right now. I just question if I’m crazy because it hasn’t been talked about. Market cap of btc vs silver! We spent months at the same cap of silver so this movement by silver shows what’s possible in the near future imo. What am I missing? image
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Konqueror 2 months ago
#gm I wonder what the bitcoin version of this looks like #posttonostr image
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Konqueror 2 months ago
I don't think Bitcoin is going to have diminishing returns 400,000,000 businesses exist worldwide The majority of them will NEVER own more than 0.01 BTC When more individuals and businesses figure out what Bitcoin is, demand will be relentless I don't know a single person who understands what Bitcoin is but doesn't want more The only way to fulfill all this demand will be for Bitcoin's price to go up, since the supply can never increase past 21 million BTC #posttonostr @Rajat Soni, CFA
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Konqueror 2 months ago
In risk management, the most dangerous asset is one guaranteed to lose value over time. The USD has lost over 96% of its purchasing power since the Federal Reserve's inception. Bitcoin is a system designed to appreciate. A fixed supply meeting infinite monetary expansion. #posttonostr @npub1jan3...x52y @Samson Mow image
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Konqueror 2 months ago
Bloomberg and UBS data as of November 2025 confirm the reserve decline to 41%, fueled by central bank gold accumulation and diversification amid US Fed rate cuts and rising multipolar economic influences. image
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Konqueror 5 months ago
Bitcoin and gold share similarities as stores of value, but Bitcoin’s fixed supply of 21 million coins means each BTC represents a much larger slice of its total supply compared to a troy ounce of gold in its vast 7 billion-ounce stockpile, leading to Bitcoin’s higher volatility since big trades move more of the overall pie. As Bitcoin’s price climbs, say, to $1 million per coin, trading shifts to satoshis, its tiniest units (100 million per BTC), allowing everyday investors to buy affordable fractions like $100 worth, which spreads ownership beyond big holders and dampens price swings, much like gold’s stability after ditching the gold standard in 1971. This dynamic highlights Bitcoin’s undervaluation: its $2.1 trillion market cap is just a fraction of gold’s $28.8 trillion, suggesting massive growth potential as adoption grows and volatility eases.