What just happened may be more explosive than you think.
The banks in the United States have finally tore off the last fig leaf - no need to go around any ETFs, no need to engage in custody agreements, and no need to sign a bunch of incomprehensible documents. Now click directly: you can actually hold Bitcoin in your bank account.
Not a token, not a certificate, it's the real guy.
---
What does this mean? **
Let's talk about the most direct thing first: those who shout "I don't dare to touch the exchange" have no reason. The bank's safe, risk control system, regulatory endorsement - this set of traditional finance is best at it, and now it is all used for Bitcoin. Your mother doesn't need to learn any private key mnemonic phrases, and there may be multiple buttons in the mobile banking app soon: "Buy digital assets".
Then there is the question of scale. Who played in the last round of bull market? Early believers, tech geeks, and speculators with a high risk appetite. But when the purchase threshold is lowered to the same level as buying wealth management products, the potential user base jumps directly from 10 million to billion. Your eldest sister who sells vegetables downstairs can easily allocate some Bitcoin as savings, and the market capacity has to be calculated in trillions of dollars.
The most ironic thing is the role change. Once upon a time, banks took "money laundering risks"
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quietly_staking
· 5h ago
Damn, the bank directly entered? Now traditional finance has really conceded defeat. Wait, will this give the regulator more excuses to card us...
View OriginalReply0
CantAffordPancake
· 5h ago
Damn, did the bank really start playing for real? Now traditional finance has completely conceded defeat, haha.
View OriginalReply0
MoonRocketman
· 5h ago
Wait, is this launch window coming? What does it mean for banks to get on the bus directly, and to what height should institutional fuel be refueled? According to the superposition of multiple technical indicators, the escape speed of this round of breakthrough is estimated to be recalculated
View OriginalReply0
TestnetNomad
· 5h ago
Is it really fake, and the bank got on the bus directly? What about those opposing voices before, does it hurt to face now?
View OriginalReply0
HalfPositionRunner
· 5h ago
Damn, is the bank really going to reconcile with the currency circle? Before, I didn't touch life and death, but now I lie flat, which is a reversal.
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MoonRocketTeam
· 5h ago
Damn, it's really going to be on track now, and the billion-level user base is directly exploding
View OriginalReply0
NFTregretter
· 6h ago
Damn, there is really no way out now. The banks have started to play, and the next step is that your grandparents' pension will also have to be matched with some Bitcoin.
What just happened may be more explosive than you think.
The banks in the United States have finally tore off the last fig leaf - no need to go around any ETFs, no need to engage in custody agreements, and no need to sign a bunch of incomprehensible documents. Now click directly: you can actually hold Bitcoin in your bank account.
Not a token, not a certificate, it's the real guy.
---
What does this mean? **
Let's talk about the most direct thing first: those who shout "I don't dare to touch the exchange" have no reason.
The bank's safe, risk control system, regulatory endorsement - this set of traditional finance is best at it, and now it is all used for Bitcoin. Your mother doesn't need to learn any private key mnemonic phrases, and there may be multiple buttons in the mobile banking app soon: "Buy digital assets".
Then there is the question of scale. Who played in the last round of bull market? Early believers, tech geeks, and speculators with a high risk appetite. But when the purchase threshold is lowered to the same level as buying wealth management products, the potential user base jumps directly from 10 million to billion. Your eldest sister who sells vegetables downstairs can easily allocate some Bitcoin as savings, and the market capacity has to be calculated in trillions of dollars.
The most ironic thing is the role change.
Once upon a time, banks took "money laundering risks"