$1 Million Bitcoin Isn’t A Far-Fetched Idea: Bitwise Says

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Bitcoin reaching $1 million per coin often sounds unrealistic to investors, but multi-billion dollar asset manager chief investment officer (CIO) Matt Hougan says the skepticism usually stems from a basic misunderstanding about how the asset should be valued.

In a memo released Tuesday, the CIO of Bitwise Asset Management argued that many analysts rely on “static math” when thinking about bitcoin’s long-term price potential. According to Hougan, that approach ignores the fact that the market bitcoin competes in — the global store-of-value market — has expanded at a rapid pace for decades.

Hougan wrote that a lot of people hear $1 million and immediately dismiss it, noting that the price would represent roughly a 14-fold increase from current levels. 

“$1 million sounded absurd—even to me,” Hougan wrote. “I no longer see it that way.”

Hougan framed BTC as an emerging store-of-value asset that increasingly competes with gold. In that context, estimating bitcoin’s potential value becomes a matter of calculating the total size of the store-of-value market, estimating bitcoin’s share of that market, and dividing the result by the asset’s fixed supply of 21 million coins.

By Hougan’s estimates, the global store-of-value market today stands at just under $38 trillion, consisting largely of gold and BTC.