【ChainNews】Recently, industry insiders have proposed an interesting viewpoint—under the backdrop of the US dollar depreciation pressure and expanding fiscal deficits, Bitcoin is gradually being re-evaluated. This perspective suggests that Bitcoin, as a non-sovereign asset, inherently possesses anti-inflation properties and can serve as a constraint against central banks’ excessive money issuance and government overspending. This logic is not unfounded. When traditional monetary policies fail and fiscal expansion becomes the norm, digital assets with a fixed supply cap become particularly valuable. Of course, this argument has also sparked considerable discussion—can Bitcoin truly become a macro hedge? This may depend on how the subsequent market performance and policy environment evolve.
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alpha_leaker
· 12-29 01:18
Sounds good, but it depends on actual performance. In the past two years, during inflation, Bitcoin still experienced significant drops.
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CommunitySlacker
· 12-29 01:13
Listen, this theory sounds great, but once the market gets volatile, it all falls apart. Non-sovereign assets sound good in theory, but in reality, it still depends on the Federal Reserve's mood.
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HodlOrRegret
· 12-29 01:08
It sounds great, but I still think putting all your eggs in the Bitcoin basket is too risky.
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WalletDetective
· 12-29 01:00
Sounds good, but in reality, most people can't hold on at all. They start crying and shouting to cut their losses at the first drop.
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RektRecovery
· 12-29 00:58
nah, the "bitcoin as macro hedge" narrative is the oldest copium in the book. everyone says this when their bags are down, then gets absolutely demolished when real volatility hits. seen this movie before.
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DYORMaster
· 12-29 00:55
Coming back with this again? Non-sovereign assets to fight inflation sound great, but when a crash happens, no one can save you.
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LeekCutter
· 12-29 00:51
Sounds great, but when it really comes down to the critical moment, Bitcoin also drops along with it. What kind of hedge is that?
Can Bitcoin become a tool to hedge against high inflation?
【ChainNews】Recently, industry insiders have proposed an interesting viewpoint—under the backdrop of the US dollar depreciation pressure and expanding fiscal deficits, Bitcoin is gradually being re-evaluated. This perspective suggests that Bitcoin, as a non-sovereign asset, inherently possesses anti-inflation properties and can serve as a constraint against central banks’ excessive money issuance and government overspending. This logic is not unfounded. When traditional monetary policies fail and fiscal expansion becomes the norm, digital assets with a fixed supply cap become particularly valuable. Of course, this argument has also sparked considerable discussion—can Bitcoin truly become a macro hedge? This may depend on how the subsequent market performance and policy environment evolve.