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So here's what I've been watching lately. We're in the middle of a pretty brutal crypto crash - Bitcoin's down over 40% from its peak, and honestly, some of the narratives that used to hold it up are starting to crack.
Let me break down what caught my attention. Bitcoin's still massive - sitting at around $1.5 trillion in market cap, which is wild. But last year it actually closed in the red, even though gold surged 64% during the same period. That's the part that's bothering me. If Bitcoin was supposed to be this digital gold, this store of value that people flee to when things get chaotic, why did investors abandon it for actual gold when the U.S. deficit hit $1.8 trillion and inflation concerns were everywhere? That's a pretty significant test it failed, in my opinion.
Then there's the payment angle. Even some of the biggest Bitcoin believers are wavering now. Ark Investment Management just cut their 2030 price target from $1.5 million to $1.2 million because they're now thinking stablecoins are the real play. And when you look at the numbers, it kind of makes sense - stablecoins hit $3.5 trillion in transaction volume over 30 days in December, which is more than double what Visa and PayPal combined are processing. Plus, 50% of American consumers say they'd use stablecoins, and it's 71% for Gen Z.
Now, Michael Saylor just dropped another $204 million into Bitcoin through his company MicroStrategy, bringing their holdings to about 3.6% of all Bitcoin in existence. That's the kind of conviction that usually makes people think "maybe I should buy the dip too." Historically, every Bitcoin dip has been buyable since 2009, so there's that precedent.
But here's where I'm skeptical. We've seen two massive crashes before - 2017-2018 and 2021-2022 - where Bitcoin lost over 70% from peak. We might not be at the bottom yet. And I genuinely think there's more skepticism around Bitcoin's future right now than I've ever seen. The store of value thesis is questioned, the payment mechanism narrative is being challenged by stablecoins, and the sentiment is just different.
Historically, Bitcoin has recovered from every crash. But that doesn't mean this one is done falling. If you're thinking about buying, maybe keep it small and manage your risk accordingly. The crypto crash might have more room to run.