Veteran crypto educator Davinci Jeremie has delivered a blunt message to Bitcoin investors: relying on a single price explosion to get rich is the wrong approach. The commentary came in response to a user on X who asked when Bitcoin would "boom." Jeremie replied, "If you're relying on Bitcoin to 'boom' to make you rich, you're doing it wrong. Bitcoin is for storing what you earn. The win is time plus stacking."
Jeremie argues that Bitcoin was never designed as a get-rich-quick scheme, criticizing the common mindset of treating it like a lottery ticket. He emphasizes that Bitcoin's fixed supply of 21 million coins and slow adoption curve reward long-term holders who accumulate through market cycles, not those waiting for a moonshot.
The educator's strategy breaks down into two core components: "stacking" refers to buying small amounts of Bitcoin regularly, regardless of price, and "time" means holding those assets for years or decades. This method aims to remove the emotional pressure of timing the market and focuses instead on the gradual accumulation of satoshis.
Jeremie's fundamental point is that Bitcoin is primarily a store of value, designed to preserve wealth earned through other means like work or business, not to generate it. He highlights the contrast with fiat currency, which loses purchasing power over time, while Bitcoin's hard cap offers long-term value preservation—but only if holders understand what they own.
The news coincides with Bitcoin trading above $93,000, hitting a three-week high and clearing its 50-day moving average for the first time since early October's market downturn. Bitcoin is up approximately 6% year-to-date after a rough fourth quarter where it fell about 22%. Ether also moved higher alongside Bitcoin as broader markets rallied.
Jeremie concludes that for investors asking which year Bitcoin will boom, the question itself is the problem. The sustainable path to building Bitcoin wealth, according to his philosophy, is through disciplined, routine accumulation and patience, not speculation on short-term price movements.