Still Think You Missed the Boat on This Top Crypto? Here’s Why It’s Not Too Late to Buy in 2025
Crypto’s bull run isn’t over—it’s just getting started. Forget the FOMO; here’s why this leading digital asset still has room to explode.
The Institutional Floodgates Are Open
BlackRock’s ETF approval was just the beginning. With sovereign wealth funds quietly accumulating, retail is still early to the party—even if Wall Street won’t admit it.
Adoption Metrics Don’t Lie
Active wallets hit record highs this quarter while legacy finance scrambles to retrofit blockchain onto their creaky systems. Guess who’s winning?
The Halving Effect Is Coming
Bitcoin’s supply shock hits right as demand curves vertical. Basic economics says what happens next… unless you think this time is different (spoiler: it never is).
Close Like a Pro: Meanwhile, your bank still charges 2% for wire transfers. Progress marches on—just not through traditional finance’s marble lobbies.
Bitcoin mining keeps getting harder
Bitcoin's WHITE paper describes two methods for adding monetary value to the cryptocurrency.
The computers running the system currently receive 6.25 Bitcoins when a data block is completed -- about once every 10 minutes. Generating the data blocks requires a lot of computing power and electricity, making the process similar to investing in land, work, and mining equipment to collect physical Gold ore.
The rewards are halved after every 210,000 data blocks, or approximately four years. The fourth bitcoin halving took place in April 2024, and the next should fall in March 2028. The rewards will eventually be smaller than the tiniest fraction of a Bitcoin that the system can use in transactions, known as a satoshi. That will be the end of Bitcoin creation, and all processing rewards from that point (around the year 2140) will come from transaction fees.

Image source: Getty Images.
Lost coins and lasting value
There will never be more than 21 million Bitcoin in circulation. The real coin reserve is actually a bit smaller, as some coins are lost forever and can't be replaced.
So there's a strictly limited supply of Bitcoin. If demand for this cryptocurrency increases over time, the coin price should also rise. It's a basic supply and-demand calculation, further protected by the large investments already made in the Bitcoin mining infrastructure.
With Bitcoin exchange-traded funds on the market and rising institutional investments, Bitcoin looks poised for a long and wealth-building history.