4 Reasons to Buy Bitcoin Before 2028

Key Points

Bitcoin 's (CRYPTO: BTC) price has risen nearly 240% over the past three years, even as rising rates and the implosions of several big tokens and exchanges chilled the crypto market. Bitcoin survived that sell-off, which wiped out many of the smaller altcoins and meme coins, and it emerged as the safest "blue chip" cryptocurrency to invest in.

In 2024, Bitcoin's first spot price ETFs were approved, and its latest "halving" reduced its mining rewards. President Trump's victory in November also drove many investors back toward Bitcoin, since his administration adopted more crypto-friendly policies than the Biden administration. President Trump also ordered the establishment of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile this March, while declining interest rates generated additional tailwinds for the broader crypto market.

4 Reasons to Buy Bitcoin Before 2028

As Bitcoin hovers above $100,000 and trades just a few dollars below its record high, investors might be wondering if it's time to finally take profits. However, some big institutions and investors expect its price to surge even higher over the next three years.

By 2028, Standard Chartered claims its price could soar to $500,000 as its volatility decreases and its ETFs lock in more investors, while Maelstrom's Arthur Hayes expects its price to surge to $1 million as the devaluation of the U.S. dollar drives investors toward more alternative assets.

We should take those bullish estimates with a grain of salt, but I personally think it could be wise to buy Bitcoin before 2028 for four simple reasons.

1. The next Bitcoin halving

Bitcoin underwent four halvings in 2012, 2016, 2020, and 2024. Each time those rewards were cut in half, it became increasingly difficult to mine Bitcoin for a profit. Back in 2012, traditional desktop GPUs could still be used to mine Bitcoin. But today, miners need to use powerful application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) instead of GPUs.

Before its first halving, Bitcoin had a block reward of 50 tokens for each block they created. But after its four halvings, that "block reward cut" dropped to just 3.125 Bitcoins.

The rising difficulty of mining Bitcoin will tighten its supply and slow down its production as it inches toward its maximum supply of 21 million Bitcoins. Approximately 19.7 million of those coins have already been mined, and the last one is expected to be mined in 2140.

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