Now, the vast majority of people regard Bitcoin as an investment asset rather than a means of day-to-day transactions. Bitcoin's white paper is written like this, Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System. Satoshi Nakamoto's original intention was to create an electronic cash system for transactions. But as we know, the total amount of Bitcoin is limited and will be all mined sooner or later. There are already many Bitcoins that cannot be circulated in the market due to hash errors or hardware loss. When Bitcoin is in deflation, the number of Bitcoins in circulation on the market will decrease, and its price will increase, and people will be more inclined to hold their own Bitcoins, which will lead to a further decrease in the number of circulations. People gradually define it as an investment product or an anchor like gold, rather than electronic cash for trading. Is the Bitcoin at this time still the original Bitcoin?
Fundamentally, Bitcoin is still a form of currency and that can't be disputed and it hasn't lost its primary purpose. The current price is derived from the institutional investors which are quite speculative in nature, like Tesla. In the case of people starting to HODL Bitcoin without wanting to sell it, they're in fact creating a bubble and it would pop sooner or later. It is simply not sustainable for the majority to be refusing to sell their Bitcoins and there has to be a limit where people stops demanding for Bitcoins, the cycle cannot be perpetual.
As you've mentioned, the original purpose of Bitcoin is for P2P transactions. So far, the changes to Bitcoin is to gear it up for mass adoption someday, through capacity increases.
Using Bitcoin as an investment product is currently what most institutions do. Investors like Elon Musk did not buy Bitcoin because they believed that decentralization could change the world. At the just-concluded Miami conference, many people believed that Bitcoin is an investment asset and anchor. This is not a guess, maybe the wording of the vast majority is wrong, and I am willing to change it to some people.
Correct. The most influential people appears to treat Bitcoin as a speculative asset as compared to something that can replace fiat.