This article explains how Bitcoin's fixed-supply monetary protocol and thermodynamic design are repricing real-world assets at a rate faster than fiat inflation can devalue them.
By: Michael P. Di Fulvio, CBSA, CBSP
Preface
This is what happens when an inflationary measurement system collides with a fixed-supply monetary protocol—when fiat’s elasticity meets Bitcoin’s thermodynamic precision.
2020 to 2025: The Repricing Begins
In 2020, the average U.S. home cost $317,000, while Bitcoin traded near $9,100—about 34.6 BTC to buy that home.
By 2025, the same house costs $410,800—a 29% rise in fiat terms.
Bitcoin, meanwhile, trades around $121,000, up more than twelvefold.
That same house now costs 3.4 BTC.
The result:
This isn’t volatility—it’s monetary inversion.
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