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Just caught up with something Pierre Rochard has been building that's actually worth paying attention to. The guy's been in the Bitcoin space since 2012 — back when most people were still figuring out what a blockchain even was — and he's evolved from early thought leadership at Satoshi Nakamoto Institute to pushing institutions to take Bitcoin seriously through actual financial structures.
What's interesting is his shift in focus. Pierre Rochard isn't just talking about Bitcoin as digital gold anymore. He's tackling a real problem: how do you get traditional credit markets — the kind that move trillions — to actually allocate capital to Bitcoin? His answer is Bitcoin-backed credit products with what he calls 'bankruptcy-remote' structures. Think of it as making Bitcoin digestible for the fixed-income crowd who've spent decades buying real estate debt and corporate bonds.
The ambition is bold: $1 trillion in Bitcoin acquisition over 21 years through The Bitcoin Bond Company. That's not a casual goal.
What caught my attention most was his take on mining and value. While critics obsess over energy consumption, Pierre Rochard reframes it completely: mining is about monetary sovereignty. You control your own money, or you don't. The environmental debate misses the point entirely because it assumes Bitcoin has no value to begin with. Once you accept that Bitcoin is actual monetary technology — not a speculative asset — the mining conversation changes.
He's also moving away from the halving-cycle price prediction model. According to Pierre Rochard, Bitcoin's returns are increasingly tied to macro factors like Fed policy. Higher rates pull capital out; lower rates push it in. It's becoming a genuine macro asset, not just a four-year trading cycle.
The biggest friction point? Education. Most institutional investors have never seen a fixed-income product backed purely by Bitcoin. They're comfortable with real estate, corporate debt, equities — but this is genuinely new territory. Pierre Rochard's betting that within the next decade, Bitcoin-backed credit products will be standard, not exotic.
One thing he pushed back on: concerns about transaction fees or network security in a low-fee environment. His argument is that the system is anti-fragile by design — if there's ever actual pressure on the network, fees spike and miners return. It's not a static system waiting to break.
The broader narrative Pierre Rochard is pushing is simple but significant: Bitcoin has moved past being fringe experimentation. It's core monetary infrastructure now. The question isn't whether it has a role — it's when the credit markets finally catch up to that reality.