💸 Bitcoin and the housing market: when homes stop being savings accounts
CEO of Strike and 21 Capital, Jack Mallers, released a video explaining how Bitcoin is gradually demonetizing the housing market, returning it to its “proper” purpose.
According to Mallers, 70% of Americans cannot afford the average home. The main reason is that real estate has become a tool for capital accumulation. Instead of being a place to live, houses and apartments are used to preserve wealth and protect funds from inflation.

Why this is a problem:
- Housing as an investment asset creates a shortage of affordable homes.
- Wealthy individuals buy properties not to live in them, but for speculation and accumulation.
- The average American is left “on the sidelines,” unable to purchase housing at a reasonable price.
How Bitcoin changes the situation:
Mallers argues that cryptocurrency allows people to store capital outside the housing market, reducing pressure on prices. When money moves into digital assets, homes stop being a tool for wealth accumulation and become a place to live again.

Potential economic impacts:
- Democratization of the housing market — home prices will better reflect real human needs rather than investment speculation.
- Reduced rental pressure — fewer people will buy real estate solely for renting or reselling, stabilizing the market.
- Increased financial independence — storing capital in Bitcoin and other digital assets reduces reliance on real estate as a savings vehicle.
🏠 Mallers emphasizes: homes are not savings accounts; they are meant to be lived in. The emergence of new capital storage tools, like Bitcoin, and the shift of money from real estate to cryptocurrency could make housing more accessible for ordinary people and reduce systemic market imbalances.
📹 A video clip is available on our Telegram channel.
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