Bitcoin is inherently valuable - this fact is an immutable truth that comes from the very essence of the world's first cryptocurrency.
After all, Satoshi Nakamoto fixed the upper emission threshold of his creation at the protocol level: in total there will be 21 million BTC in this world and not more coins. This fact in itself creates an obvious shortage over time.
And we also have halving, which every four years also reduces the process of the emergence of a new cryptocurrency, making it an even rarer “exhibit” each time.
Let’s add to all this the fact that every fourth bitcoin in this world is lost (that’s about 4.7 million minus coins from circulation). This is another deflationary component.
Therefore, from a global perspective, there is no doubt about the growth of the Bitcoin rate: after all, the time will come when the last coin will “come out from under the miner’s pick”, and the era of mining the world’s first cryptocurrency will end, and holders of digital gold will become akin to collectors.
P.S. And fiat dollars are simultaneously printed and printed, printed and printed - right now, while you are reading this text, they are printed...