Bitcoin investors are being forced to rethink why they hold the asset as inflation data cools, according to Bitcoin entrepreneur Anthony Pompliano.
âI think the challenge for Bitcoin investors, can you hold an asset when there is not high inflation in your face on a day-to-day basis?â Pompliano said during an interview with Fox Business on Thursday. âCan you still believe in what Bitcoinâs value proposition is, which is that itâs a finite-supply asset. If they print money, Bitcoin is going higher,â he said.
âBitcoin and gold are great long-term things,â he said. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) fell to 2.4% in January from 2.7% in December, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. However, Mark Zandi, Moodyâs chief economist, recently told CNBC that inflation âlooks better on paper than in reality.â
Bitcoin (BTC) is typically seen as a hedge against inflation because only 21 million coins will ever exist. When central banks increase the money supply and the value of fiat currencies declines, investors often turn to perceived riskier assets, such as Bitcoin, to protect their purchasing power.
Bitcoin sentiment has reached multi-year lows
It comes as sentiment for Bitcoin has reached multi-year lows not seen since June 2022, with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, which measures overall crypto market sentiment, posting an âExtreme Fearâ score of 9 in its Saturday update.

Bitcoin is trading at $68,850 at the time of publication, down 28.62% over the past 30 days, according to CoinMarketCap.
US dollar devaluation will be covered up by âmonetary slingshotâ
Pompliano said the macro environment could create short-term volatility for Bitcoin before it resumes its upward trajectory.
âWeâre going get deflationary-type forces in the short term, people are going to ask to print money and to drop interest rates,â he said.
He explained that this will lead to the devaluation of the US dollar, though the effect wonât be immediately visible.
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âThe currency is going to be devalued at a time where deflation covers up the impact, so I call it a monetary slingshot,â Pompiano said.
Pompliano forecasted that the Federal Reserve will continue to expand the money supply to âdeal with inflation,â but as the dollar faces further devaluation, he expects Bitcoin to become âmore valuable than ever.â
The US dollar index, which tracks the dollar’s strength against a basket of major currencies, is down 2.32% over the past 30 days and is trading at $96.88, according to TradingView.Â
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