Anthony Scaramucci, the founder of SkyBridge Capital, in a recent statement, conveyed that Bitcoin “meets all the criteria that have historically defined money, ” thereby pointing out the digital currency’s conformity to the attributes of conventional money. Scaramucci went on to highlight the maximum supply of Bitcoin being capped at 21 million coins by design.
He illustrated that even if each coin was priced at $1 million, the overall value of the network would be $21 trillion. These words come as another input in the continuous institutional debate over the part that Bitcoin plays in world finance and in the allocation of digital assets.
By his statement, Scaramucci is essentially identifying Bitcoin with the main roles of money: a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value. Bitcoin’s peer-to-peer blockchain, open ledger, and mathematical security form the base of these characteristics.

In contrast to government-issued money, the quantity is decided by a fixed set of rules (protocol) rather than by the decisions of a central bank. The issuance scheme predetermined in the code, along with the halving event, makes the supply of BTC disinflationary, and thus it has been compared to scarce minerals like gold in the discussions of the macroeconomy.
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The 21 million coin limit is a core element of BTC’s tokenomics model. Scaramucci used a scaling example to show that $1 million per coin means a $21 trillion total value. That is based on how market capitalization is calculated as circulating supply multiplied by unit price.
Although the calculation is simple, real valuation is subject to factors like liquidity demand, regulatory clarity, and more adoption by exchanges, custodians, and institutional portfolios.
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One factor that has led to increasingly positive institutional views on Bitcoin’s money attributes is the continued expansion of regulated custody, spot ETFs, and compliance infrastructure. This reflects the dual feature of Bitcoin: from one side, it is a store of value asset, on the other side, it is a non-sovereign transaction network.
At the same time, there are also challenges to BTC that have to be overcome, such as its volatility, establishing minimum cybersecurity standards, and the fact that global regulation is continuously evolving, with trading, taxing, and institutional risk frameworks being the main areas of impact.
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