No. You are completely missing the point.
For starters, you keep changing your story what bitcoin is. An asset or money?
Years ago, we were told that bitcoin was the money of the future. However, we now know that it won't ever be. It's transactions are painfully slow to confirm and very expensive. No way it will ever have a chance as payment system against the thousands of modern Fintech solutions available.
By now most of the evangelists have abandoned the money story and we are now told that bitcoin is an asset to protect against inflation. The problem with that is that assets better have value or how can they protect against inflation. I will argue that bitcoin is the most rampant inflationary asset ever: it appreciates in value without any reason. The comparison against securities doesn't hold, as securities are a certificate proving your fractual ownership of an underlying asset (a company when we have shares, a debt claim when we have bonds, a part of a diversified portfolio when we have funds). Bitcoin is neither, it is just the certificate but it's empty, there is no underlying. When I say that, the evangelists say: "but the Dollar". Problem is, we just established bitcoin ain't no money, it's an asset. If you want to protect against inflation, buy real estate, buy land, buy ownership in a diversified portfolio of companies earning money and paying dividends. Why would bitcoin protect against inflation? Yes, there is finite supply, but why would people buy it in the first place? It's only a belief system, the moment the belief stops, there is zero value left. That does not apply to real estate or equities: when belief stops, there is still intrinsic value. The valuation of the asset may have been wrong, but there is value. Explain to me where the value in a crypto computer file is.
No matter how you spin it, you have to settle for money or asset - and I say it lacks critical property of both.
And please don't use price as proof. I didn't want to own bitcoin when it was $1 and I don't want to own it now. Does that mean I have been proven wrong? No, it doesn't. I was short Wirecard for a long time and it cost me a lot of money until the bubble finally burst. You can also use pets.com as an example. Where the investors in the company proven right by its ballooning share price? They certainly thought so - until the price corrected and the company filed for bankruptcy. You can use any other bubble as an example: tulips, the south sea bubble, railroads - the price seemed to prove the cult investors until it didn't anymore. The same will happen with bitcoin.
And now I am meeting friends for a bicycle tour in the sun.