At the moment, Bitcoin (BTC) is trading slightly above $118,000, having recuperated from a slump that brought it down to $114,500 on July 24. However, behind this seemingly placid price movement, an explosive narrative is brewing. Advocates argue that we’re in the midst of the most strategically planned supply shock in cryptocurrency history, and once the dust settles, BTC could potentially reach a staggering $1 million valuation.
The Million-Dollar Vision, as outlined in a July 25 post by Swan, a Bitcoin-exclusive financial services firm, suggests that the current rally is unique. It is thoughtful, calculated and surprisingly underplayed. “This is the least ebullient bull market we’ve ever witnessed,” Swan noted, adding, “And that’s bullish.”
The theory? Corporate treasuries and spot-exchange traded funds are subtly accumulating BTC via algorithmic “trickle buys.” These are not reckless bettors wagering on meme coins, but rather CFOs and CIOs diversifying their balance sheets while the retail market slumbers. Swan refers to this as “deliberate absorption,” which they believe is maintaining a deceptive price stability, at least for the time being.
Nevertheless, crypto influencer American HODL suggests that a breaking point is imminent. He posits that once a sufficient number of corporate balance sheets begin to list BTC as a strategic reserve asset, boardrooms globally will rush to follow suit, similar to the 1999 internet boom. “I believe the corporate treasury bubble could reach dot-com era proportions,” he stated in a recent podcast. “We could see a 3–4 year run pushing Bitcoin well beyond a million dollars.”
To substantiate their claim, Swan researchers proposed a four-stage blueprint that they believe is already underway:
- Quiet corporate absorption via algorithmic buys
- Sovereigns quietly stacking Bitcoin
- Major treasury firms establishing structures for maximum bidding
- Narrative contagion sparking a multi-year price surge
“That’s the groundwork for a mania-fueled climax pushing toward $1M Bitcoin,” the firm affirmed. As we ponder the effects of Bitcoin rallying from $42,000 to $123,000 during a historic tightening cycle, Swan poses an intriguing question: what will happen when cheap money finally makes a comeback?





