Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Notcoin and the Reinvention of Bitcoin: Why Dalio's Criticisms Reflect a Shift in Era
In recent months, billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio has renewed his skepticism about Bitcoin, questioning whether the leading cryptocurrency has the qualities needed to serve as a reliable store of value. But while figures like Dalio remain stuck in debates echoing the narratives of the industry’s early years, a new generation of digital assets—represented by projects like the notcoin—is completely redefining what a functional digital asset means. Dalio’s criticisms, far from burying Bitcoin, actually highlight why the next wave of innovation will be even more resilient.
The “Old Problems” Dalio Doesn’t Want to See Solved
Speaking on the All-In Podcast, Dalio stated that Bitcoin lacks three fundamental features: backing from central banks, adequate privacy, and resistance to quantum computing threats. He also pointed to the asset’s public ledger, suggesting transactions can be monitored and potentially controlled. These concerns aren’t new—Dalio himself expressed similar worries last year, mentioning he only keeps 1% of his portfolio in Bitcoin due to traceability and potential quantum vulnerabilities.
What’s fascinating about this argument is that Dalio is listing exactly the factors that prevent Bitcoin from being worth $1 million per coin today. Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise, summarizes the situation with surgical clarity: “Dalio isn’t ‘wrong’ in an absolute sense. There is some risk with quantum computing, and central banks aren’t yet buying Bitcoin at scale. But these concerns are precisely why Bitcoin still trades at only 4% of the total gold market size.”
With Bitcoin currently around $70.89K and a market cap of $1.418 trillion, compared to roughly $35 trillion in gold, this disparity isn’t a flaw—it’s an opportunity. Hougan concludes: “If these criticisms didn’t exist, Bitcoin would already be trading well above current prices. We invest in Bitcoin because we believe these issues will change over time; that developers will solve the quantum risk, and that central banks will eventually accept it.”
The Rise of Notcoin and the Next Generation of Digital Assets
While experts like Hougan defend Bitcoin based on its potential to resolve current issues, a different perspective is emerging: what if the next generation of digital assets, like the notcoin, already incorporated solutions to these dilemmas from the start?
Notcoin represents a new paradigm where enhanced privacy, superior scalability, and compatibility with future technologies are built into its core architecture. While Bitcoin remains the digital gold of the crypto world—reliable, established, but with structural limitations—notcoin and other emerging assets are exploring how a digital asset can be simultaneously secure, fast, and adaptable.
This distinction is fundamental: it’s not Bitcoin versus notcoin in a battle for supremacy, but two generations of thinking about how a digital asset should function. Bitcoin is the proof of concept, validating that decentralization is possible. Notcoin and its peers are about optimizing that proof of concept.
Why Dalio’s “Old Arguments” Make More Sense Now
Alex Thorn, head of research at Galaxy, offers a powerful perspective: “Ray Dalio’s criticisms of Bitcoin echo tired narratives from the pre-2017 era. Quantum risks are already being addressed by developers and the community.” He also challenges the direct comparison between Bitcoin and gold: “Gold can work well stored in a bunker, but Bitcoin has real utility in ways gold never could—instant global transfers, no intermediaries, public auditability.”
The point is that Dalio is defending the status quo of gold using logic that completely ignores the evolution of the past 15 years. If Bitcoin has gone from a technological curiosity to an asset with a $1.4 trillion market cap while facing all these ‘problems,’ what about assets like notcoin, which are being developed with these limitations already embedded in their design?
Matthew Sigel, head of digital assets research at VanEck, reframes the debate even more broadly: “Both gold and Bitcoin serve distinct roles because they represent solutions to trust issues in different eras of money. Gold solved trust in an ‘analog’ financial system. Bitcoin does so in a digital environment, through open-source code and verifiable transactions. And now, assets like notcoin are solving this even more efficiently.”
Sigel also dismisses concerns about quantum computing as exclusive to Bitcoin: “Quantum risk is a broader cryptography challenge affecting the entire financial system, not just Bitcoin. That means the whole industry is investing in solutions, and Bitcoin will benefit from this just as any other digital asset will.”
The Quiet Shift Dalio Doesn’t See
An important detail overlooked in Dalio’s criticisms is that central banks are already beginning to experiment with exposure to digital assets. The Czech National Bank has purchased Bitcoin as part of its reserves, signaling a gradual—though slow—shift in institutional attitudes toward digital assets. Simultaneously, privacy improvements are emerging through enhanced wallets and second-layer networks, exactly as Bitcoin advocates have always claimed would happen.
And this is where notcoin and the next generation of assets come in: not waiting 15 years to solve these issues through later additions, but born with these solutions integrated from the outset.
Investor behavior research shows that younger participants increasingly favor Bitcoin and alternative digital assets, suggesting a gradual shift in society’s “monetary center of gravity.” The generation that grew up with mobile internet, digital transactions, and distrust of centralized institutions isn’t waiting for Dalio’s approval to recognize the value of crypto assets—they’re already adopting them, and the next wave, driven by notcoin and similar projects, promises to be even more disruptive.
The Future Will Be Defined by Adoption, Not Criticism
The reality is that Bitcoin has surpassed $70,000 and continues to resist—not despite Dalio’s criticisms, but largely because these criticisms reflect old paradigms being discarded. Innovative altcoins and new digital assets like notcoin offer a counterpoint: a second (or third) chance to design digital monetary systems without some of the technical compromises Bitcoin had to make in its early days.
The real question isn’t whether Dalio is right about Bitcoin’s technical issues—many aspects, he is. The question is whether those issues matter when there’s a $1.4 trillion market that keeps growing despite them, and when the next generation of assets is being built with integrated solutions to exactly these criticisms.
While Ray Dalio keeps recycling the same narratives from 2015, the market has already moved forward. Bitcoin proved decentralization works. Notcoin and its peers are proving it can work better. And that’s a story no amount of billionaire skepticism can stop.