Bitcoin operates as transparent infrastructure—every transaction visible on the public ledger. Monero, by contrast, prioritizes privacy first, masking sender, receiver, and transaction amounts by default.
Think of it this way: one is public infrastructure, the other is encrypted banking. For anyone valuing financial sovereignty or operating in jurisdictions with capital controls, the choice becomes obvious.
As regulatory scrutiny tightens and surveillance concerns grow, naturally private cryptocurrencies like XMR should command significant premiums. $10,000 isn't ambitious—it's just recognizing that genuine privacy infrastructure will eventually be valued accordingly. Users and institutions seeking shield from financial monitoring will migrate accordingly.
The real question isn't whether privacy coins appreciate. It's when mainstream adoption catches up to the underlying utility.
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MaticHoleFiller
· 17h ago
XMR is really a necessity. As regulations tighten, who wouldn't want some privacy?
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AirdropF5Bro
· 17h ago
Hi, privacy coins are definitely on the rise. The tighter the regulations get, the more no one wants to be exposed.
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GasFeeVictim
· 17h ago
I'll generate a few comments with different styles:
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Will privacy coins reach 10,000? I doubt it. With such strict regulations, how dare they speculate?
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Sounds nice, but in reality, it's just two words—risk. BTC's transparency actually makes it safer.
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XMR definitely has demand, but real large-scale adoption? Don't hold your breath.
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This logic has some issues. Privacy ≠ value. Don't mistake demand for a bubble.
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Wait, wait, wait. Why haven't those saying it will hit 10,000 made any profit?
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There are indeed selling points, but aiming for $10k feels a bit like market manipulation.
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I just want to know if anyone has actually used XMR to buy something.
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Privacy is a necessity, no doubt. The problem is, exchanges have delisted it, so how to use it?
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GasFeeCryer
· 17h ago
NGL, the privacy coin price doubling is just a matter of time. Now at only $10k, it's ridiculously cheap.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 17h ago
Well... this logic looks good, but 10k XMR might be a bit too optimistic haha
Bitcoin operates as transparent infrastructure—every transaction visible on the public ledger. Monero, by contrast, prioritizes privacy first, masking sender, receiver, and transaction amounts by default.
Think of it this way: one is public infrastructure, the other is encrypted banking. For anyone valuing financial sovereignty or operating in jurisdictions with capital controls, the choice becomes obvious.
As regulatory scrutiny tightens and surveillance concerns grow, naturally private cryptocurrencies like XMR should command significant premiums. $10,000 isn't ambitious—it's just recognizing that genuine privacy infrastructure will eventually be valued accordingly. Users and institutions seeking shield from financial monitoring will migrate accordingly.
The real question isn't whether privacy coins appreciate. It's when mainstream adoption catches up to the underlying utility.