
Roberto Daga
273 posts





@ttmygh You folks are all going to eat crow when Saylor is the richest man in the world in the 2030’s. Bookmark it.




There's only 4.6% of #Bitcoin left to be mined. In 2 years, it will be just 3.1%. At this point, new supply issuance will be cut in half permanently. People are currently focused on when the bear market is over (is it now? in 3 months?)... but the supply shortage that will fuel the next bull market is already loading. This is the heart of Bitcoin's game theoretic inevitability. Bitcoin has increasing scarcity of new supply issuance... terminating in absolute scarcity. Both of these properties are a first in the world of store-of-value assets (because a set-in-stone supply schedule is not possible in the physical world - only in the digital world). And yet, 99.9% of the world does not realize these simple truths, and as a result has not yet adopted Bitcoin as their primary savings technology / treasury asset. They will have to bid for the meager 4.6% of new supply left, or try to buy existing coins from the 0.1% who already understand what Bitcoin is. All you have to do is remember what you're holding, accumulate if you can, and wait for economic reality to continue to play out. When the 99.9% come bidding for your coins, at what price will you sell them some?







As damage control, @Saylor just announced $MSTR bought 1,550 BTC for $101 million while also increasing its U.S. dollar reserves by $100 million. If MSTR sold stock at a discount, that diluted Bitcoin per share. This doesn't prove MSTR can sell Bitcoin, but that it can't.

Strive acquired an additional 32 $BTC for ~$2.1M at an average cost of ~$63,911 per bitcoin. $ASST $SATA


Michael @saylor just landed in Prague for the @BTCPrague. We grabbed a beer, and he told me about the next big thing from Strategy: $SHBL Wall Street is not ready. 😂










"STRC is not a money market. It absolutely is not a money market, even though it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck. It is not a duck." @real_vijay on why the retail capital chasing that 11.5% yield may get into trouble chasing it.









