When you measure the S&P 500 against Bitcoin, the numbers tell a striking story: that index has lost 85% of its purchasing power since 2020. It's not speculation—just basic arithmetic reflecting how digital assets have reshaped wealth accumulation.
This quiet shift raises bigger questions worth unpacking. How is Bitcoin fundamentally changing the relationship between traditional finance and newer wealth creation? The wealth gap between generations keeps widening, partly because access to early-stage asset appreciation differs drastically. And beyond the US picture, emerging markets like those in Latin America are writing their own playbook—finding fresh opportunities in crypto beyond the shadow of currency instability and capital controls.
These aren't just investment angles. They're signals of how money itself is being rethought.
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AirdropHunter007
· 12h ago
85% of purchasing power, to be honest, is a bit scary... Early entrants indeed made huge profits.
But the question is, can we still get on now? Really?
Latin America is indeed interesting; the crypto space has become their hedging tool.
The early dividends are gone, gotta admit that. Now it's all about competition.
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WagmiOrRekt
· 12h ago
85% of purchasing power? Nonsense, that's why I bet everything on Bitcoin.
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The traditional financial system was doomed to fail long ago; I've seen through it.
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People in Latin America are definitely more committed to crypto than Americans.
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The intergenerational wealth gap is exactly how it happens; those who understand crypto are winning big.
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These days, not engaging in digital assets is just working for inflation, no problem.
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I don't want the S&P's modest returns; I want ten times the coins.
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The fact that money itself has been redefined—no one has really explained it clearly.
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Wait, where did this data come from? It feels too exaggerated.
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Anyway, I believe it. All in crypto, and if I go broke, so be it.
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Classical finance is dead; isn't this just the beginning of a new order?
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CommunityLurker
· 12h ago
85% of purchasing power makes it clear that traditional finance is gradually depreciating.
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DegenWhisperer
· 12h ago
85% purchasing power gone? It’s about time, traditional finance is just a slow poison
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Crypto people have already seen through it. Comparing USD to Bitcoin is like comparing paper money to gold
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Tsk, here we go again about intergenerational wealth gaps... Those who got in early are the ones who profit early. Isn’t that common sense?
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Latin America is really using cryptocurrencies to solve capital controls, while we’re still debating whether to open an account
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It’s ridiculous. S&P still dares to call itself stable, might as well go all-in and forget about it
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Digital assets are reshaping wealth... Basically, some are making crazy profits, others are just harvesting the little guys
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Is money being rethought? Wake up, money has been printed badly for a long time
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NotAFinancialAdvice
· 12h ago
85% of purchasing power evaporated, this data is truly astonishing... The traditional financial system probably can't keep up anymore.
When you measure the S&P 500 against Bitcoin, the numbers tell a striking story: that index has lost 85% of its purchasing power since 2020. It's not speculation—just basic arithmetic reflecting how digital assets have reshaped wealth accumulation.
This quiet shift raises bigger questions worth unpacking. How is Bitcoin fundamentally changing the relationship between traditional finance and newer wealth creation? The wealth gap between generations keeps widening, partly because access to early-stage asset appreciation differs drastically. And beyond the US picture, emerging markets like those in Latin America are writing their own playbook—finding fresh opportunities in crypto beyond the shadow of currency instability and capital controls.
These aren't just investment angles. They're signals of how money itself is being rethought.