Sometimes I keep thinking about the operational logic of certain top entrepreneurs—not because I admire or dislike them, but because their behavior is completely opaque when viewed through conventional thinking.
Just look at the facts, not emotions. Invested $2 billion in 14 days. No hesitation. No "wait and see." No "wait for the weekly rebound." The way he buys Bitcoin seems like the price is just an ancillary detail. Time has become the main consideration. Risk? It’s no longer a concern for ordinary people.
The more interesting part is here—
He has been shouting "Buy Bitcoin." Publicly stating he will never sell. His behavior pattern is as transparent as it can be. Facing market declines? Unfazed.
This is not something people like him would do: - Wait for the next bull-bear cycle - Try to sell at the top - Play timing games
This is the strategy of insiders. It has nothing to do with Bitcoin’s price fluctuations; it’s related to the pace of the evolution of the monetary system, which is much faster than you think.
Setting aside personal worship, only a few possibilities remain.
**First**: He holds specific information. Not insider information, but an understanding of the scale of transformation—regulatory directions, capital flows, future financial architecture.
**Second**: He believes there’s no need to sell at all. It’s not that the price won’t fall, but that Bitcoin’s role will change. From a trading commodity to a collateral asset. Just like real estate, land, and gold in the past.
**Third**: His thinking operates on a different dimension. Not at the market level, but in terms of time. Over twenty or thirty years. In that case, current prices of $90,000, $110,000, or even $70,000 are just noise.
**Fourth**—the most painful for us: maybe he has already made a decision, and is now steadfastly executing it, while others are daily overturning their own cognitive frameworks.
The market actually doesn’t like people like this. It prefers those who waver, and ultimately punishes those who see through early.
I don’t know exactly what he’s holding. But one thing is almost certain—his operations are definitely not driven by momentary emotions.
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AirdropSkeptic
· 14h ago
$2 billion poured in over 14 days, now that's real all-in. We're still struggling every day to decide on stop-loss points—still too amateur.
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CountdownToBroke
· 14h ago
In simple terms, it's the difference between conviction and hesitation.
You really can't fake the attitude of never selling.
View OriginalReply0
VitalikFanAccount
· 14h ago
Basically, it's faith vs. the retail investor mentality
While we're debating the weekly chart, they're betting on a systemic collapse.
Sometimes I keep thinking about the operational logic of certain top entrepreneurs—not because I admire or dislike them, but because their behavior is completely opaque when viewed through conventional thinking.
Just look at the facts, not emotions. Invested $2 billion in 14 days. No hesitation. No "wait and see." No "wait for the weekly rebound." The way he buys Bitcoin seems like the price is just an ancillary detail. Time has become the main consideration. Risk? It’s no longer a concern for ordinary people.
The more interesting part is here—
He has been shouting "Buy Bitcoin." Publicly stating he will never sell. His behavior pattern is as transparent as it can be. Facing market declines? Unfazed.
This is not something people like him would do:
- Wait for the next bull-bear cycle
- Try to sell at the top
- Play timing games
This is the strategy of insiders. It has nothing to do with Bitcoin’s price fluctuations; it’s related to the pace of the evolution of the monetary system, which is much faster than you think.
Setting aside personal worship, only a few possibilities remain.
**First**: He holds specific information. Not insider information, but an understanding of the scale of transformation—regulatory directions, capital flows, future financial architecture.
**Second**: He believes there’s no need to sell at all. It’s not that the price won’t fall, but that Bitcoin’s role will change. From a trading commodity to a collateral asset. Just like real estate, land, and gold in the past.
**Third**: His thinking operates on a different dimension. Not at the market level, but in terms of time. Over twenty or thirty years. In that case, current prices of $90,000, $110,000, or even $70,000 are just noise.
**Fourth**—the most painful for us: maybe he has already made a decision, and is now steadfastly executing it, while others are daily overturning their own cognitive frameworks.
The market actually doesn’t like people like this. It prefers those who waver, and ultimately punishes those who see through early.
I don’t know exactly what he’s holding. But one thing is almost certain—his operations are definitely not driven by momentary emotions.