Short-term risks remain. The debt settlement of Mt.Gox may continue to drag, and expectations of economic recession and regulatory uncertainty persist. The callback of GameStop stock reminds us not to blindly follow the trend. However, Bitcoin's history of rising repeatedly over 13 years proves its resilience. The burst of the 2017 ICO bubble, the low point of the 2020 pandemic - when did it not rise from the ashes? Saylor calls it "order in chaos," which, though abstract, is somewhat justified by the stock price miracle of Strategy.
For long-term investors, this might be a time to "sow seeds". Institutions are buying the dips, policies are loosening, the market is reshuffling, and the value of Bitcoin is being redefined. Retail investors may be pessimistic, but history tells us that low points often breed opportunities. Who could have imagined that Satoshi Nakamoto's "experiment" would now be sought after by S&P 500 companies and even become a hedging tool amid tariff turbulence?
Bitcoin has fallen, but the story is far from over. Institutions are in action, data is whispering, policies are doubling down - all pointing to a possibility: the current low point may just be a prelude to the next peak. Saylor's "more orange" is more than a slogan; it's a prediction of the future. Fallen this much? No problem. Bitcoin's prospects may be more solid and promising than imagined.