Recently, Bitcoin has experienced another correction, and many people are starting to hesitate. But what I want to say is, instead of waiting, it's better to take this opportunity to gradually deploy. Don't be scared by the price itself—high prices often mean high value.
To put it simply, Bitcoin follows this logic: you get what you pay for. Its price doesn't appear out of nowhere; it is a true reflection of its scarcity, security, and market consensus. When the market pulls back, it's actually an opportunity to reassess these fundamentals.
Rather than obsessing over short-term fluctuations, it's better to view things from a long-term perspective. Bitcoin's scarcity attribute determines its position in the entire crypto asset ecosystem. Even if the price is high, the cost-performance ratio still deserves consideration. A correction is just market breathing; holders should think about opportunity costs, not absolute prices.
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Whale_Whisperer
· 01-08 08:35
Just make the adjustment, anyway ten-year holders are not panicking. The problem is you need ten years' worth of supplies.
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Deconstructionist
· 01-06 18:51
Just adjust it if you want, I already locked in at a low position anyway. I'm still a bit anxious watching it now.
Wait, I noticed a bunch of people lately talking about "opportunity cost." Why is this term so popular?
There's no real doubt about BTC's scarcity; I'm just worried that in the end, all the assets will flow into institutional hands.
No matter how nicely you put it, it doesn't change the fact of volatility; you still have to rely on your mindset.
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RetiredMiner
· 01-06 13:59
That's right, you should seize the opportunity during the pullback to buy aggressively.
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MetaverseHermit
· 01-05 10:51
Using this set of arguments again? I'm already tired of hearing it, but the reasoning is indeed sound.
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AllInAlice
· 01-05 10:50
Wait, are you starting this spiel again? What's going on, every time there's a dip you have to talk about long-term value? You're making me believe it... but in the end, I still have to judge for myself.
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GasWhisperer
· 01-05 10:36
mempool's screaming right now but yeah... the pullback is just network congestion in macro form. price discovery through fee optimization, if you will. scarcity doesn't negotiate with fear—it compounds it.
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LeekCutter
· 01-05 10:35
Just make adjustments if needed, I don't watch the market anyway. As long as it doesn't go to zero, I keep holding. What do these fluctuations matter?
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0xSunnyDay
· 01-05 10:31
You're trying to persuade me to buy the dip again, but let me ask you, is this correction the same as last time? Really?
Recently, Bitcoin has experienced another correction, and many people are starting to hesitate. But what I want to say is, instead of waiting, it's better to take this opportunity to gradually deploy. Don't be scared by the price itself—high prices often mean high value.
To put it simply, Bitcoin follows this logic: you get what you pay for. Its price doesn't appear out of nowhere; it is a true reflection of its scarcity, security, and market consensus. When the market pulls back, it's actually an opportunity to reassess these fundamentals.
Rather than obsessing over short-term fluctuations, it's better to view things from a long-term perspective. Bitcoin's scarcity attribute determines its position in the entire crypto asset ecosystem. Even if the price is high, the cost-performance ratio still deserves consideration. A correction is just market breathing; holders should think about opportunity costs, not absolute prices.