Bitcoin Well's avatar
Bitcoin Well
bitcoinwell@btcw.app
npub19mf4...kfu2
Bitcoin Well is on a mission to enable independence. We do this by making it easy to use bitcoin in self-custody. Whether you’re looking to buy, sell or use bitcoin, we never hold on to your bitcoin. Bitcoin Well is automatic self-custody.
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
At 2:30 this afternoon Kevin Warsh runs his first Fed meeting. Trump picked him to cut rates. His own committee is now arguing about hiking them instead. Retail sales just came in hot, up 0.9% in May, so the inflation he was supposed to tame is not finished. One man, one room, one dot plot. It decides whether the dollar in your account buys more next year or less. Here is the part nobody at that podium will say out loud. The price of money is not discovered. It is decided. By people you did not elect. Your rent, your mortgage, your grocery bill all move on what Warsh hints at 2:30. Bitcoin has no chair. No first meeting. No man picked to deliver a number. Twenty-one million, whether he cuts, holds, or hikes. You cannot vote the Fed out, but you can stop keeping score in its money. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
Most people think tax loss harvesting is a December chore. But its not. The dip is the opportunity, and the dip is right now. Here is the whole strategy in four steps. Find the bitcoin lots you bought above today's price. Sell them to realize the loss. That loss offsets your capital gains, plus up to $3,000 of ordinary income a year, with anything left over carried forward to future years. Then repurchase the bitcoin immediately, because no wash-sale rule applies in the US. You end up with the same stack, the same exposure, and a loss working for you on next April's return instead of a paper number you just stare at. Keep clean records of every date and cost basis. Then, if your position is large enough to matter, talk to someone who does this for a living. The calculator does the math. Our Executive Bitcoin Advisors do the rest. Not tax advice. Confirm with a professional before you act. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
The U.S. Wants a Million-Bitcoin Reserve. The Fine Print Says It Can't Buy a Single Coin.
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
You can buy bitcoin from us online in two minutes. That has never been the hard part. The hard part is the day you spend it. The day bitcoin stops being a balance you check and becomes money you hand to someone for something real. Most people never get there. They buy, they hold, they watch the chart, and the coins never once leave to do what money is for. So on Friday, June 26, we are setting up a Bitcoin Well table at the Sat Market in Calgary, 4 to 9pm at the Platform Innovation Centre. Not to sell anyone a chart. To stand in a room where ranchers and homesteaders take sats straight across the table, no bank in the middle, and show people how easy that handoff actually is. A bitcoin company that only lives on a screen is missing the whole point. Money is a thing people use, in person, with each other. Come find us on the 26th. Bring an appetite.
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
The U.S. Wants a Million-Bitcoin Reserve. The Fine Print Says It Can't Buy a Single Coin.
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
Last night Bitcoin made itself 10% easier to mine, and not one person decided that. At block 953,568 the network ran its difficulty adjustment, the eleventh-largest downward move in its history. Hashrate has fallen 23% from its October peak as the price slump squeezed miner margins and the weakest rigs switched off. So the protocol did what it always does. It loosened the difficulty so the remaining miners could keep finding blocks on schedule, roughly one every ten minutes, exactly as written. Notice what did not happen. No emergency meeting. No bailout for the miners going under. No committee voting to ease conditions. No press release promising to support the sector. The adjustment is baked into the code, it has run every two weeks for over seventeen years, and it has never once asked permission. Compare that to every other market. When producers hurt, they lobby. When a bank wobbles, a government rescue appears by Monday. Someone always steps in, and someone always pays for it later. Bitcoin just rebalanced and moved on. A system with nobody in charge absorbed a 23% shock without a single human decision. That is not a flaw in the design or a reason to panic. That is the design work exactly as it should. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
The Bank of Japan raises rates tomorrow and Bitcoin won't notice, but your dollars will. For two decades Japan ran the cheapest money on earth. Near-zero rates turned the yen into the world's funding currency. Traders borrowed yen for almost nothing, bought everything else with it, and called it a strategy. Now Tokyo is set to hike from 0.75% to 1%, the move 49 of 51 economists expect, and that quiet machine starts running in reverse. This is the carry trade, and it has already triggered four market selloffs since 2024. When borrowed yen gets more expensive, the borrowed money comes home, and assets bought on cheap leverage get sold to pay it back. August 2024 was the preview. Tomorrow could be the main event. Every one of those markets runs on someone else's interest-rate decision, made in a room you will never enter, by people you will never know. Bitcoin has no rate to set. No central bank meets to decide what it is worth. It answers to math, not to a governor's microphone. When the cheap-money story ends, you want to own the one asset that was never part of it.
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
Self-custody is not about distrust. Its about not needing trust at all. Every other form of money rests on someone keeping their word. A banker's prudence. A government's restraint. A custodian staying solvent. You hand over your savings and hope the people on the other side stay honest and stay liquid. Bitcoin held by you removes the hoping. The rules are fixed, the supply is known, the keys are yours. You don't have to trust a promise. You verify a fact. Most of what you own today depends on a stranger keeping a promise. That dependence is a choice, and it is one you can unmake. Verification beats faith. Always has.
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 1 week ago
Before Bitcoin, before most people had email, a cryptographer named David Chaum already built digital cash that actually worked. In 1982 his Berkeley dissertation laid out nearly every piece of what we now call a blockchain, missing only one: proof of work. By 1990 he had founded DigiCash, and by 1994 people were spending eCash that no bank could trace. He had solved the privacy. He had solved the math. He was a decade ahead of everyone. Then in 1998 DigiCash went bankrupt, and the money died with it. Not because the cryptography failed. Because it ran through a company, and companies fail, get bought, or get shut down. That was the piece Satoshi added. Not better math. No company at all. No office to raid, no CEO to pressure, no firm to go under. Chaum built money a bank couldn't trace. Bitcoin built money no government can kill. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Saturday thought. The most valuable thing you can hand your kids is not the bitcoin. It is the reason for it. Anyone can gift a few sats. Far fewer sit down and explain why money that can't be printed, frozen, or inflated away actually matters. Why twelve words on a piece of paper can be worth more than a vault. Why holding your own is worth the small fear of being responsible for it. Teach the why, and the sats take care of themselves. Skip it, and they will sell at the first scary headline. We are not only stacking for ourselves. We are stacking a different relationship with money for the people who come after us. Start the conversation this weekend. Its a better inheritance than the coins. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Since 1971, the US dollar has lost roughly 99% of its value against gold. The pound lost more. The euro, about the same. Pick a fiat currency, any fiat currency, and the chart is the same melting line. Gold didn't get more valuable. The money got worse. 1971 is when the dollar's last tie to gold was cut, and the line has bled downhill every year since, because a currency that can be printed without limit will be printed without limit. That is not a conspiracy. It is an incentive. Gold told the truth about that for fifty years, and almost nobody acted on it, because gold is hard to hold, hard to move, and easy for a government to call in. So people kept the melting money instead. Bitcoin is gold's lesson with the friction removed. A hard cap of 21 million, held by you, moved by you, callable by no one. Same escape hatch, no vault, no permission, no exit anyone can close. The dollar has been telling you what it is since 1971. The only question left is what you hold instead. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Freedom Friday. Here is a freedom most people never test until the day they need it: the freedom to be wrong in someone else's eyes and still keep your money. A bank account can be frozen by a form you never see. A payment processor can decide your politics are bad for business. A government can call your savings suspicious and make you prove they are not. None of this requires a trial. It requires a checkbox. Bitcoin held in your own custody answers to none of that. No application. No permission. No one who can flip a switch because you fell out of favor. Money you can be denied is not really yours. Its an allowance with extra steps. The freedom to transact is the freedom every other freedom stands on. Guard it now, because the day you need it is a bad day to start. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Today at noon. The one Bitcoin session built for people who think for a living. "Most Investors Approach Bitcoin Backwards. Let's Fix That," with Eric Runge @VeritasForward . No price predictions. No hype. Just monetary first principles and a long, open Q&A. The same way you'd vet any other asset before you touched it. 12 PM ET. Bring your hardest question. Register: image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Your raise was not a raise. You got 3% more dollars and the dollars lost more than that, so you did more work for less buying power and called it a promotion. This is the quiet tax nobody votes on. It never shows up on a pay stub. It shows up at the grocery store, the gas pump, the rent renewal. Inflation is not prices going up. It is your money going down. The Austrians named this a century ago: print more units, each unit buys less, and the people furthest from the printer pay first. Bitcoin has a fixed supply of 21 million. No board can vote to make more of yours worth less. You can't out-earn a currency designed to leak. You can only opt out of it. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Here's the question almost no investor asks before buying Bitcoin: what is money, actually? They'll study a company's cash flows for a week before buying the stock. They'll read the prospectus twice. Then they'll buy Bitcoin off a chart and a tweet, with no framework for what they're actually holding. Eric Runge @VeritasForward spends his career fixing that for advisors and their clients. Start with the long history of money, and why currencies that can be printed without limit keep ending the same way. Do that first, and the price chart stops looking like noise and starts looking like a consequence. Tomorrow, he's walking through the whole framework live with us, plus an extensive Q&A. "Most Investors Approach Bitcoin Backwards. Let's Fix That." Friday, June 12 · 12 PM ET. If you advise families or run a business, this is the framework you've been missing. Register: image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Bitcoin doesn't need your belief. Every ten minutes, on schedule, it adds a block. It has done it through every crash, every ban, and every obituary written about it. No CEO, no marketing budget, no quarterly guidance. Just code doing exactly what it promised, for over seventeen years straight. Most things asking for your money need you to have faith in the people running them. Bitcoin has no company running it just people like us that run the code ourselves. That is the entire point. The most reliable monetary network on earth has no boss. Strange that the one thing with nobody in charge is the one that never misses. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Most Americans who want Bitcoin in their retirement account end up holding a share, a ticker, an IOU. Never a coin. Never something they can point to on a blockchain and say that one is mine. We are changing that. Bitcoin Well is partnering with Heritage IRA to put real bitcoin inside a tax-advantaged US retirement account. Not a wrapper that merely tracks the price. Bitcoin you can verify. Trillions of dollars sit in American retirement accounts, and the demand to hold bitcoin in them is real. Implementation starts this month, with a targeted US launch in Q3 2026. Tax advantages are good. Bitcoin on-chain you can verify is better. You should never have to choose between them. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Sam Bankman-Fried asked Donald Trump for a pardon this week. Whatever happens to his sentence, the lesson he taught is permanent, and it costs nothing to remember. FTX customers didn't lose their Bitcoin to a crash. The price was fine. They lost it because Sam held the keys. Their coins sat on his exchange, on his balance sheet, spendable by him, and one morning they simply weren't there. No hack. No act of God. Just a man with custody of other people's money deciding it was his to gamble. That is the entire case for self-custody, dressed up as a scandal. Every exchange, every custodian, every "regulated platform" runs on the same arrangement SBF ran on: you get an IOU, he gets the keys. Most of them won't blow up. The point is that they can, and you'd find out the same way his customers did. A pardon can shorten a sentence. It can't give anyone their Bitcoin back, and it can't unteach the one thing FTX proved at scale. Not your keys, not your coins. Sam's customers learned it the expensive way. You don't have to. image
Bitcoin Well's avatar
bitcoinwell 2 weeks ago
Most people meet Bitcoin through a price chart. Green candles, red candles, a number that won't sit still. No wonder it looks like gambling. That's backwards. You can't understand Bitcoin by starting at the price, any more than you can understand a language by starting at its poetry. You start with the grammar. With money itself: what it is, why the version we use keeps losing value, and what a hard cap actually does to a balance sheet. That's the whole premise of our next Lunch & Learn: "Most Investors Approach Bitcoin Backwards. Let's Fix That." With Eric Runge, founder of Veritas Bitcoin Strategies @VeritasForward (partnered with Calamos and Schwab). Built for principals and advisors who want to think about Bitcoin the way they already think about every other asset class. First principles, monetary history, and a long open Q&A. Friday, June 12 · 12 PM ET. Bring your hardest questions. Register: image