Do any of those charts that track #Bitcoin against the dollar take inflation and debasement into account? I would really like to see some adjusted charts with dollar values from a decade ago instead of todays dollar value. If Btc falls to whatever amount today, but that amount of money only has half the spending power it had compared to a decade ago. That, in my mind means the whole chart is skewed, as time goes on the highs appear higher and the lows appear higher than they actually are. Based on spending power instead of just "hurr duur number go up hodl"

Replies (3)

Not sure what happened I tried to share with the #asknostr hashtag but instead just shared the note twice
When adjusting historical all-time highs for U.S. inflation, Bitcoin’s true purchasing power peaked at approximately $99,848 (in 2020 constant dollars) during its October 2025 rally. This means its nominal peak of over $126,000 failed to cross the six-figure threshold in inflation-adjusted terms.To better understand how inflation impacts historical Bitcoin milestones, you can look at the real purchasing power of its major price peaks compared to their nominal (uncorrected) values:October 2025 Peak: Nominal price of ~ $126,198 translates to an inflation-adjusted value of $99,848 (using 2020 dollars).November 2021 Peak: Nominal price of ~ $69,045 translates to an inflation-adjusted value of roughly $79,000 today.Early 2024 Cycle Peaks: Nominal prices of around $73,000, when discounted for cumulative U.S. CPI changes, result in an inflation-adjusted purchasing power in the low-to-mid $60,000 range
Best I could find was 2020 onwards. If someone can find a more long term version of this chart id like to see it. Be interesting to see from 2009 onwards image