Bitcoin Supply Shock Incoming: Crypto Pioneer Warns of Imminent Market Squeeze
The crypto trenches are buzzing—again. This time, it's not about ETF approvals or Elon tweets. A hardened Bitcoin oracle just dropped a bombshell: we're days away from a full-blown supply shock.
The Halving Hangover Hits Hard
Remember April's halving? Miners got their block rewards slashed in half overnight. Now, the real dominoes start falling. With daily minting down to 450 BTC and institutional ETFs vacuuming up 10x that amount, the math gets ugly fast.
Vultures Circling Thin Order Books
CEX liquidity resembles a desert mirage—depth charts show just 3-5% cushion at current prices. When BlackRock comes knocking for their weekly 25,000-coin fix? Good luck finding sellers without moving the needle 15% north.
The Cynic's Corner
Meanwhile, Wall Street's newly converted 'crypto analysts' still can't tell a hardware wallet from a Swiss vault. But hey—when the rockets fire, even the clueless get rich.
Strap in. This could get violent.

Keiser’s Striking Bitcoin Supply Shock Prediction
Keiser’s remarks have brought the long-discussed issue of limited bitcoin supply back into the limelight. The protocol coded by Satoshi Nakamoto fixes the total supply at 21 million BTC, with nearly 20 million already in circulation today. Keiser believes that if demand remains strong, the rapidly diminishing remaining amount could significantly drive prices upward.
Experts also view the upcoming April 20, 2024, fourth block reward halving as a critical inflection point, reducing the block reward from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC. The next block reward halving in 2028 will again cut new BTC production by 50%. Keiser and Mow argue that this mechanism will decrease the selling pressure from miners, restrict fresh supply to the market, and trigger the “supply shock.”
ETFs Bolstering Bitcoin Demand
Samson Mow predicts an unprecedented demand-side squeeze as well. He believes that approved spot Bitcoin ETFs, notably BlackRock’s iShares IBIT fund, have already pulled billions of dollars worth of Bitcoin into custodial accounts over twelve months, thus reducing liquidity on exchanges. If this trend continues, the growing institutional demand against declining daily production will exert dual pressure on bitcoin prices.
Institutional firms are also staying proactive. Michael Saylor’s strategy firm, with over half a million BTC in reserves, is the second-largest Bitcoin investor after BlackRock. Japanese-based Metaplanet and Anthony Pompliano’s new venture, ProCap BTC, are continually purchasing Bitcoin. Experts highlight that these treasury management strategies combined with ETF inflows are setting the stage for the “supply shock” Keiser predicts.
These developments in institutional strategies and market dynamics contribute significantly to the potential imminent supply shock scenario projected by Keiser. As more institutions acquire and hold Bitcoin for the long term, the pressure on existing supplies amplifies, enhancing the narratives around scarcity and value proposition.
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