When Bitcoin Cost Less Than a Penny
Bitcoin (BTC) has been kicking around for nearly 17 years now, which means we've had plenty of time to fantasize about what might have been if we'd gotten in early. And by early, we mean really early.
Back in January 2009, Satoshi Nakamoto mined the genesis block and created the first 50 BTC. By October of that year, a Finnish computer science student made one of the first recognized Bitcoin transactions, selling 5,050 BTC for $5.02. Do the math, and that works out to $0.0009 per coin.
Back then, acquiring Bitcoin was a DIY affair. You either mined it yourself or arranged a peer-to-peer transaction. There were no exchanges, no apps, no infrastructure. Just cryptography nerds exchanging digital tokens.
The Math That Hurts
Let's play a fun game of financial time travel. Imagine you'd stumbled across Nakamoto's Bitcoin whitepaper, actually read the thing, and thought, "You know what? This sounds interesting enough for $10."
Bitcoin didn't have an established market price in those early days, but using that $0.0009 figure from the Finnish transaction, your $10 would have netted you approximately 11,111 BTC.
At today's price of $87,268 per Bitcoin, that modest investment would be worth roughly $970 million. You wouldn't quite make Forbes' billionaires list, but you'd be close enough to not care. That kind of money funds multiple lifetimes of luxury for you and probably your grandchildren too.
To put this in perspective: you could buy Jeff Bezos' superyacht Koru (assuming he'd part with it for its reported $800 million price tag) and still have $170 million left over. That's more than enough to snap up Elon Musk's entire fleet of private planes and still have change for fuel.
Where Bitcoin Stands Now
Price Action: At the time of writing, BTC was trading at $86,421, up 3.51% over the previous 24 hours.




