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$BTC 🚨The total supply of Bitcoin is no longer 21 million
Many believe that Bitcoin's crash was due to spot selling. But the bigger picture is more profound.
The total supply of Bitcoin remains at 21 million coins. This has not changed. What has changed is the way price discovery works.
In Bitcoin's early days, prices mainly reflected real buying and selling in the spot market. Scarcity was important because actual coins were transferred between holders. The supply and demand relationship felt straightforward.
Today, there is a second layer on top of Bitcoin. A financial layer.
This includes:
• Futures markets
• Perpetual contracts
• Options trading
• Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and structured products
• Broker lending and synthetic exposure
These tools do not create new $BTC on-chain. But they create synthetic exposure to Bitcoin's price.
This changes market dynamics.
When derivatives trading volume exceeds spot trading volume, price begins to respond less to the actual flow of coins and more to positions, leverage, and liquidation flows.
In simple terms, price movements are now more based on traders' positions rather than actual holdings.
One Bitcoin can now influence multiple financial products simultaneously. This expands tradable exposure without increasing actual supply. Some call this a synthetic floating extension.
When this happens:
• Bull markets are more aggressively shorted
• Leverage rapidly increases
• Liquidations trigger intense volatility
• Volatility rises
This is not limited to Bitcoin. Gold, oil, and stocks have also experienced similar shifts after derivatives started dominating price discovery.
It also explains why $BTC sometimes drops without large spot sell-offs. Pressure may come from leveraged liquidations, futures positions, options hedging, or ETF arbitrage.
Therefore, the 21 million cap still exists.
But today’s market structure means that “paper Bitcoin” often drives short-term price movements more than actual supply.
#BTC mining difficulty decreases