The one true value proposition of Bitcoin is its fixed supply schedule, with the 21 million BTC supply cap, programmed in the network’s algorithm for periodic release with each block mined. Bitcoin halving event occurs due to a feature within the Bitcoin algorithm. It involves reducing the mining rewards given for adding new blocks to the blockchain. When Bitcoin started, miners received 50 Bitcoins for each block added. However, after every 210,000 blocks or roughly four years, there is a halving wherein miner rewards get slashed by half. This process makes Bitcoin supply diminish over time, making it a digitally scarce asset with each passing event of the halving. The daily release of new Bitcoin decreases, strengthening its position as a store of value, in a world where money printing has become the norm for central banks. Investors should not look at BTC as an inflation hedge, but rather as a hedge against monetary debasement.