[edited out]
That’s a very good breakdown. A lot of people don’t realize how their UTXOs can start to stack up and spread over time, especially if they have been using Bitcoin for a while across different cycles. What you explained is exactly how it happens..... one transaction here, another there, and before you know it, you have several small UTXOs in different wallets.
I also like the point about keeping some wallets as intermediate ones. It makes a lot of sense to have levels between hot and cold storage, depending on how often you plan to use the coins. Keeping track of all this might seem like a lot, but if someone is serious about holding long term, this kind of planning will really help later....
Yes. It is a good habit to keep track of wallets, especially the ones with larger transactions connected with them... And it can take a bit of time to figure out some organized way to keep track..... maybe keeping track of the colder storage or medium storage might be more important, and maybe the hot wallets might have more transactions and harder to keep track, so guys have to figure out if they are able to keep track of everything or just the transactions within certain wallets.
Some people suggest that the tax treatment of transactions to treat them as capital rather than currency can cause some accounting burdens which can disincentivize spending bitcoin or conducting smaller transactions... yet surely if a wallet is divided into accounts, then at least the accounts could be of certain categories including if you have an exchange that you use, then you might send all of the transaction from that exchange to the same account, so then at least you know that the transactions are related to that exchange within that account.
It’s small details like these that really show the maturity of a Bitcoin user. You are not just holding, you are managing your stack with long term clarity. Thanks for sharing that, it reinforces why thinking in UTXOs, not just BTC balances, matters a lot......
Some people don't even know what UTXOs are, since they keep their coins on exchanges, so there can be some value in learning about UTXOs, which comes from experience and trying things out.. which might scare people away from bitcoin since they might find it confusing to learn about wallets and make sure that they don't screw up their security and/or their privacy... and like we said bitcoin is not by default private if it is being used in non-private ways, and it is hard to imagine that someone would think that their coins are secure if they are being held through a third party (exchange). Don't get me wrong. Starting out in bitcoin might require starting out with an account on an exchange prior to figuring out some ways to self-custody.
There can be situations when people end up sharing too much, and even if I do a bitcoin transaction with a friend in 2017, yet if I do not move the change address, the transaction in 2017 might have been worth a couple thousand dollars (1 or 2 bitcoin) and maybe my change was a couple thousand dollars (1 or 2 bitcoin), but then that balance of 1 or 2 bitcoin is now worth way more than what it was worth in 2017, and many folks do not even have 1 or 2 bitcoin, even though prior to 2017, we might have had been transacting with several bitcoin at at time, especially if we might have made some large purchases with bitcoin, we may have sent several bitcoin for a transaction that was a couple thousand dollars.
This really highlights how drastically Bitcoin’s value has evolved over time. What used to feel like casual transactions like sending 1 or 2 BTC for basic purchases now seem like moves worth a small fortune. It’s crazy to think that something as simple as not moving your change from a 2017 transaction could mean you are still sitting on a huge balance today without realizing it....This is why Bitcoin truly rewards time and patience and why being cautious with past addresses and transaction history is more important than ever.
Guys who have been in bitcoin for a while have these kinds of stories, including that in 2015 (when BTC prices were around $250) they might have had like a few thousand dollars on some hot wallet (and maybe it was too much?) and maybe they had $15k or $20k in some wallet that they considered a bit more secure, but surely not totally secure.
But then when bitcoin prices went up to $19,666 within 2 years, they might not have had kept their security at the place that it should have had been, so then the few thousand in the hot wallet might have had turned into $100k or $200k... .. and the larger amounts of $15k to $20k might have turned into more than $1 million. .. since the price rise was around 78x in about 2 years.
Similar things happened in 2021, yet the price rise was ONLY around 16.5x in 2.5-ish years... so 2021 was a bit less extreme as compared with 2017.. and surely the rise in 2013 was even greater,.. since it was a rise of more than 200x in the period from 2012 to the 2013 peak.
Yeah, stories like this are part of what makes Bitcoin so wild and interesting. Back then, a few thousand dollars in a wallet didn’t feel like much, but once the price shoots up 70x or more, that same wallet suddenly feels like a vault. It is easy to forget how fast things can change and how fast we can get caught off guard if we are not managing risk properly.......
Yep.. We have to manage it, and perhaps also not be tempted to show all of our friends how $3k turned into $210k.. Even though it is so tempting to want to do it, especially with close friends and/or family.
A lot of people learned the hard way that security should grow with your stack. What felt secure enough at $250 per BTC didn’t hold up when BTC hit $19k or more. And yeah, while 2021 didn’t feel as crazy as 2017 or 2013, the gains were still life changing for many. These cycles really do teach us, not just about holding, but also about how to stay prepared when success shows up faster than expected.......
Even with myself. I had been through the downside of the 2013 cycle and both the upside and downside of the 2017 cycle, but even in 2019-2021 when the BTC price went up from $4,200 in April 2019 to $64k in April 2021 and then it dropped to $30k in summer 2021 and returned to $69k in November 2021, there can be some periods of surprise to have some wallets go up somewhere in the ballpark of 16x from the bottom to the top.
Even some folks in this particular cycle might have had some coins that they bought or held in November/December 2022 that were in the $16k to $20k prices, and even now when we had BTC prices go up to $120k, so then those coins had gone up 6x to 7x, which is also nothing to sneeze at, and there are folks who never had experienced 2x or 3x in value appreciating through their lives and then they are able to personally experience 6x/7x price appreciation in the past 2.5 years.. and if a guy is still accumulating he might not know what to do. If a guy had done most of his accumulation prior to October 2023, he might just feel so amazed to be on the journey, if we might consider the possibility that some guys had gotten enough BTC, yet there are way more guys who are still needing to accumulate and not to get thrown off by past bitcoin price performance in regards to their need to keep accumulating bitcoin no matter the price so that maybe they will be in a better place 4-10 years or more down the road.
[quote
This cycle is the beginning for some, and so yeah, anyone new to bitcoin likely will need to spend a whole cycle or a few cycles building up his bitcoin stash, and it tends to take a decent amount of time to build a bitcoin stash, even if a person is relatively focused on accumulating bitcoin.
Many people underestimate the time and consistency it actually takes to build a meaningful Bitcoin position. It is not just about catching the perfect dip or riding one bull cycle, it is about developing the mindset to accumulate steadily, even when the hype dies down. Every cycle teaches something new, and those who stay committed through the quiet phases are usually the ones who end up with the strongest hands and the biggest rewards in the long run. This current cycle could be the proving ground for a lot of new entrants.....
There could be a lot of guys who don't necessarily want to get focused on making money, but then when they figure out bitcoin is a great place to put any extra money that they are able to generate, then they may well become motivated to make more money and even save more money by spending less, and then they suddenly feel that they have identified a place in which they are able to put their extra money and not feel like it is losing value and/or feel that they have to spend it right away in order to preserve its purchasing power.
A lot of people don’t start out thinking about wealth building or financial discipline, but once they understand Bitcoin potential, everything changes..... Suddenly, every bit of extra cash feels like an opportunity rather than something to spend immediately. It flips the script, instead of money burning a hole in your pocket, you start seeing sats as something worth stacking and protecting.
Bitcoin quietly trains people to value their time and money more and that’s something no fiat system really encourages.......
Some people might come to bitcoin thinking about it as a possible way to trade, but then if they are paying attention and studying bitcoin, they may well come to reasonable conclusions that bitcoin is not a trade, but instead a long term play in which there will need to be a continuing and ongoing accumulating of bitcoin through buying, especially in the early years of being involved in bitcoin.