Bitwise report says Bitcoin could hit $1M if it captures 17% of a projected $121T global store-of-value market.
Bitcoin currently holds about 4% of the $38T store-of-value market dominated by gold.
Institutional adoption and ETF inflows are increasing Bitcoin’s role in professional investment portfolios.
Bitwise, the $15 billion asset manager, published a report explaining how Bitcoin could reach $1 million per coin. The analysis, titled “How Bitcoin Gets to $1 Million,” was authored by Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan. It outlines assumptions on bitcoin’s share of the global store-of-value market, highlighting long-term growth trends in digital and traditional assets as key drivers for price potential.
Matt Hougan frames Bitcoin as a digital store-of-value asset similar to gold, designed to hold wealth outside the fiat and banking system. He notes that the current store-of-value market totals approximately $38 trillion, including $36 trillion in gold and $1.4 trillion in Bitcoin. Today, bitcoin accounts for roughly 4% of this market. Hougan emphasizes that future growth in the market itself could substantially increase bitcoin’s implied value.
Hougan explained that if the global store-of-value market expands to $121 trillion over the next decade, Bitcoin would only need to capture 17% of this market to reach $1 million per coin. He cites historical growth in gold’s market capitalization, from $2.5 trillion in 2004 to nearly $40 trillion today, as a precedent for continued expansion.
The report highlights Bitcoin’s increasing adoption by institutional investors and ETFs. Hougan notes that U.S. Bitcoin ETFs have become some of the fastest-growing funds, while investors ranging from Harvard’s endowment to sovereign wealth funds now hold Bitcoin.
He also observes that Bitcoin’s long-term volatility has declined, making it eligible for allocations around 5% in professional portfolios. Hougan warns that bitcoin reaching $1 million depends on both market growth and asset adoption.
While risks exist, such as slower store-of-value expansion or failure to gain market share, he indicates that recent trends suggest the potential is achievable. His analysis underscores that capturing one-sixth of the store-of-value market over ten years is consistent with the historical trajectory of digital and traditional assets.