As gold edges closer to the historic $5,000 mark, a familiar voice in the world of finance is turning heads in a different direction. Robert Kiyosaki supports Bitcoin through his writings because he sees Bitcoin’s fixed supply helps it stand above traditional commodities: gold, silver, and oil.

According to Robert Kiyosaki’s latest X post, he views Bitcoin’s limited supply as its most valuable trait. Bitcoin”s fixed 21 million unit supply makes him put his trust in this asset, while he also owns gold and silver mining operations plus oil production assets.

“As a resource owner I can always find more mineable gold silver or oil whenever market value increases. The limitation of Bitcoin stops me from producing more like I can with gold oil and silver mines,” he said.

Robert Kiyosaki Backs Bitcoin Over Gold Amid Surge

Kiyosaki’s $250K Prediction Gains Fresh Momentum

It’s a key distinction. The built-in code rules over Bitcoin, unlike precious metals, which miners extract more of when their value rises. Bitcoin supply stays at its 21 million fixed limit no matter how high market demand soars.

With economic uncertainty growing, Kiyosaki believes the supply limit will help protect Bitcoin’s value. According to him, Bitcoin acts as digital gold since its limited production protects it from inflation and manipulation. He confirms precious metals weaken their standing as investment basics because new mining units can flow to market.

He has backed Bitcoin before, yet his growing enthusiasm matches his previous prediction of $250,000 Bitcoin price by 2025. People flock to cryptocurrency because they want to find the next strong investment alternative after noticing gold’s fast growth.

Throughout history, Bitcoin beats gold as an investment when both assets rise because people see Bitcoin’s accessibility and technology-driven nature as strong advantages.

Kiyosaki’s support for Bitcoin and his prediction come together as strong backing as both gold and Bitcoin are now moving higher. It’s a signal: Even in a time of growing supply and easy access to printing, our futures depend on something rare