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🟠 DYLAN LECLAIR: “In 10 years, every public company will hold Bitcoin — and that will separate winners from losers.”

Dylan LeClair’s statement isn’t a bold prediction for shock value — it’s a logical conclusion of how capital, technology, and monetary systems are evolving.

For decades, public companies competed on products, margins, and market share. Over the next ten years, a new dimension will quietly but decisively shape outcomes:

Treasury strategy.

Bitcoin is emerging as a strategic reserve asset, not a speculative trade. As fiat currencies continue to lose purchasing power, companies holding excess cash face a structural disadvantage. Inflation is no longer a temporary phenomenon — it’s embedded in the system.

Bitcoin offers something no traditional asset can:

Absolute scarcity (21 million)

Global liquidity

Neutral, censorship-resistant settlement

A monetary network that improves with scale

Forward-thinking companies understand this. They won’t ask “Is Bitcoin risky?”
They’ll ask “What is the risk of not holding Bitcoin?”

In the same way that:

Internet adoption separated Amazon from Sears

Mobile-first strategy separated Apple from Nokia

Bitcoin adoption will separate capital-efficient firms from capital-diluted ones.

Those who adopt early gain asymmetric upside, stronger balance sheets, and long-term optionality. Those who delay may survive — but at a growing competitive cost.

In ten years, Bitcoin on corporate balance sheets won’t be controversial.

It will be expected.

And when that happens, the winners and losers will already be decided.


Read more at: https://primal.net/e/nevent1qqsvmssk3fzvjy3zgt0gv6eszr2rqjd3w3fvpdwqe0vauthxwq96g4g3408gf

I can see this happening

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Play the long game

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But will they accept Bitcoin as a form of payment in that case? I mean if it js valuable as an asset, there is no reason you cannot let your customers (assuming there are customers, I.e. an operating business model unlike Strategy) pay in it? That saves you from going to coinbase

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We’re still very early, my friend. Currently, Bitcoin is mainly used as a store of value. Transactions exist, but they’re not yet mainstream.

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