#BTC has existed for 6,230 days and has only traded above today’s price for 355 of them. This means Bitcoin has been higher than 94% of its entire existence. $BTC
*If you have extra funds ....... buy USD1 and hold it on Binance*✅
There will be a $40 million wallet distribution among eligible users
```This USD1 campaign has gone live on Binance, what you need to do is, at your discretion, buy and hold $10, $20, $40, or any amount you can afford by purchasing USD1 .... and do not sell it afterwards, otherwise your balance will be counted as 0. This is a $40 million fund, and there will be 4 distributions of $10 million each. You will be eligible for this, and based on this, you will receive an airdrop of $WLFI ```
Unfortunately😭, 4 days ago I lost all my capital due to the fall of $BNB , I was left at 0, maybe it wasn't my fault but if it had to happen, it happened, If you could do tips with $1 each, you could support me resume what took me 6 months to start.
I told you that $RIVER is playing both sides, and it did the same thing yesterday as well; after liquidating longs, it’s now starting to move upwards...
Using a trend indicator, keep a 2% or 3% stop loss and do scalping...
In 2008, the global financial system cracked. Banks collapsed, governments printed money, and ordinary people paid the price. In that moment, someone using the name Satoshi Nakamoto published a short paper describing a new idea: digital money that didn’t rely on banks, governments, or trust in institutions.
In January 2009, Bitcoin went live. It had no price. There were no exchanges. If you were early, you could mine thousands of bitcoins on a normal computer. They were worth nothing — just an experiment.
By 2010, Bitcoin finally had a market value. One bitcoin was worth about one cent. With $100, you could buy 10,000 BTC. Most people still ignored it. Someone famously spent 10,000 BTC on two pizzas.
In 2011, Bitcoin reached $1. For $100, you could buy 100 BTC. It had already been declared dead more than once.
By 2013, Bitcoin crossed $100 for the first time. $100 now bought less than 1 BTC. Attention arrived. So did skepticism.
In 2014, Mt. Gox collapsed. Bitcoin fell to around $300. $100 bought 0.3 BTC. Many left. Bitcoin didn’t stop.
By 2016, after its second halving, Bitcoin traded near $1,000. $100 bought 0.1 BTC. Quiet years. Builders stayed.
In 2017, Bitcoin entered the mainstream, peaking near $19,000. $100 bought 0.005 BTC. Millions discovered it — most at the top.
In 2018, Bitcoin crashed to about $3,700. $100 bought 0.027 BTC. Headlines said it was finished. It wasn’t.
In 2020, trillions were printed globally. After its third halving, Bitcoin climbed toward $30,000. $100 bought 0.003 BTC. Institutions started paying attention.
In 2021, Bitcoin reached $69,000. $100 bought 0.0014 BTC. What began as an experiment became a global asset.
In 2022, leverage collapsed and exchanges failed. Bitcoin fell to around $16,000. $100 bought 0.006 BTC. The system around Bitcoin broke — Bitcoin itself didn’t.
By 2024, ETFs were approved and Bitcoin returned to highs near $70,000. $100 bought around 0.0014 BTC again — but with far fewer coins left to mine.
In 2025, Bitcoin crossed $100,000. $100 now buys ~0.001 BTC. What once bought thousands of coins now buys a fraction of one.
Today, Bitcoin has no CEO, no headquarters, and no owner. It has survived crashes, bans, bubbles, and disbelief.
The price changed every year. The rules never did. $BTC Bitcoin is still running.
CZ via Binance: You should see how much ASTER I staked.
Yeah cool. Now show us how many ASTER tokens were minted straight into your own bottomless pockets.
$ASTER has very high monthly token inflation. As we’ve already pointed out, emitting more tokens than you buy back is a classic exit-liquidity strategy... a slow farming scheme that will drain your crypto over time.
You should go back to prison and take a few of the Binance mafia with you. @cz_binance