Bitwise Asset Management Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan has reiterated his long-term thesis that Bitcoin could reach $1 million per coin if the cryptocurrency captures a significant share of the global store-of-value market currently dominated by gold and government bonds.
In a report published this week, Hougan framed the projection not as a short-term price prediction but as a logical outcome of Bitcoin’s potential to absorb a portion of an expanding $40 trillion wealth preservation market. Analysts broadly agree on the directional case for Bitcoin appreciation but remain divided on whether the timeline to $1 million spans a decade or could accelerate due to geopolitical and macroeconomic factors.
The $1 million target implies approximately a 14x increase from current Bitcoin price levels, requiring the cryptocurrency to capture roughly half of today’s store-of-value market or a smaller percentage of a significantly larger future market.
Hougan’s projection rests on two interconnected variables: Bitcoin’s share of the global store-of-value market and the overall growth of that market itself. The store-of-value universe, encompassing gold, government bonds, and other defensive assets, has expanded from approximately $2.5 trillion in 2004 to nearly $40 trillion today. Bitcoin currently represents only about 4% of this market by total value.
Under current market conditions, Bitcoin would need to capture approximately 50% of the existing store-of-value market to justify a $1 million per coin price. However, if the broader store-of-value market continues its historical growth trajectory, Bitcoin would require a substantially smaller percentage share to reach the same price point. Analysts note that this mathematical framework makes the $1 million target a function of adoption rates rather than speculative excess.
The $1 million figure has emerged as a recurring reference point across the cryptocurrency industry, cited by executives including Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, Block co-founder Jack Dorsey, and former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes. Market analysts characterize the number as serving multiple functions simultaneously.
The milestone functions as “shorthand for the idea that Bitcoin could rival gold as a store of value,” according to market observers. The exact valuation matters less than the underlying thesis about Bitcoin’s potential share of global wealth.
Some analysts acknowledge that the round number carries inherent marketing advantages, as “round numbers travel well and align with holder incentives.” However, industry participants emphasize that the underlying thesis is not purely promotional, with the mathematical framework providing substantive grounding for long-term projections.
Analysts who view the $1 million target as plausible over the long term generally frame it as a decade-scale adoption story requiring sustained institutional inflows and regulatory maturation. This perspective emphasizes that Bitcoin does not need to replace gold or fiat currency entirely; it only needs to capture a portion of a growing global store-of-value market over an extended period.
Under this framework, Bitcoin capturing approximately 17% of a projected $121 trillion store-of-value market over the next decade could mathematically justify a $1 million price.
Alternative viewpoints suggest the timeline could compress significantly if specific macroeconomic conditions materialize. Geopolitical tension strengthens Bitcoin’s investment thesis, as uncertain times drive investors toward neutral stores of value. Bitcoin increasingly occupies this category alongside gold.
More aggressive acceleration scenarios include potential sovereign debt crises eroding confidence in traditional “safe” assets or disruptions in the gold market. If confidence in conventional wealth preservation instruments weakens, capital rotation into Bitcoin could intensify more rapidly than gradual adoption models project.
Institutional participation in Bitcoin markets has increased notably following the approval and launch of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded products in multiple jurisdictions. This institutional pipeline provides the primary mechanism for Bitcoin to capture additional share of the store-of-value market.
Bitcoin’s protocol-enforced fixed supply of 21 million coins creates mathematical certainty about its ultimate scarcity. This characteristic, combined with its decentralized network architecture, gives Bitcoin properties analogous to traditional stores of value such as gold while offering superior portability and verifiability.
Some analysts identify a recurring analytical mistake in Bitcoin valuation discussions: investors frequently value Bitcoin against today’s store-of-value market rather than projecting forward the size of that market. This “static denominator” approach underestimates Bitcoin’s potential by assuming the wealth preservation universe remains constant.
If the global store-of-value market continues its multi-decade expansion trajectory, driven by increasing global wealth and demand for non-productive defensive assets, Bitcoin’s required market share to reach $1 million diminishes correspondingly. This dynamic framework underpins more aggressive long-term valuations, including Ark Invest’s projection of $3.8 million per bitcoin by the end of the decade.
Bitcoin would need to capture a significant portion of the global store-of-value market, currently dominated by gold and government bonds. Under today’s market conditions, this requires approximately 50% market share. However, if the store-of-value market continues expanding from its current $40 trillion toward projected levels above $100 trillion, Bitcoin would need a smaller percentage share. This capture would occur through sustained institutional adoption, potential sovereign wealth fund allocation, and retail investor accumulation over an extended period.
The $1 million figure functions as psychological shorthand for Bitcoin maturing into a major global monetary asset capable of rivaling gold. The round number communicates complex store-of-value capture mathematics in accessible form. Additionally, the figure carries marketing advantages as memorable benchmarks that align with holder incentives, though analysts emphasize the underlying thesis rests on substantive market share analysis rather than pure promotion.
Analyst timelines vary significantly. Gradualist projections suggest approximately a decade of continued institutional adoption, regulatory clarity, and store-of-value market expansion. More aggressive forecasts, citing potential geopolitical catalysts or sovereign debt crises, suggest acceleration toward the end of this decade. The variance reflects differing assumptions about whether Bitcoin’s adoption curve remains gradual or experiences step-function increases during periods of traditional asset stress.
Geopolitical tension strengthening Bitcoin’s appeal as a neutral store of value represents one potential accelerator. Sovereign debt crises eroding confidence in government bonds could drive capital rotation into alternative assets. Disruptions in the gold market or monetary policy changes affecting traditional safe-haven assets could also accelerate adoption. These factors share the common characteristic of weakening conviction in conventional wealth preservation instruments, potentially compressing Bitcoin’s adoption timeline.