Many called it “digital gold”. This year gold hit a record high and Bitcoin lost more than half its value.
Bitcoin peaked at 126,000 dollars last October. It now trades near 60,000, a fall of more than 50 percent. Over the same stretch gold set records and the S&P 500 rose about 10 percent. The asset sold as the hedge against a broken monetary system dropped hard while the original hedge, gold, soared, and while ordinary stocks climbed.
The single-week ETF outflow everyone is posting is the least of it. As Bitcoin's price halved and money flowed out, the spot ETFs launched in 2024 as proof that institutional money had finally arrived now hold 73 billion dollars. A large share of what once looked like conviction was never a directional bet. It was the basis trade, long the fund and short the future to capture a spread, and when the spread closed, that money left.
The believers are bleeding too. Strategy, the largest corporate holder, owns about 847,000 Bitcoin at an average cost near 75,600 dollars, underwater since February by roughly 13 billion. In June, with preferred dividends coming due, it did what Michael Saylor swore it never would. It sold Bitcoin, 32 coins, to make a payment.
None of this means Bitcoin is finished. A fall this size is ordinary in its history. It has survived drops of 77 and 85 percent and returned higher every time. Long-term holders & Bitcoin Maxis keep accumulating, and cumulative ETF inflows since launch are still positive by more than 50 billion dollars.
Two claims were supposed to make this cycle different. That Bitcoin had become digital gold, and that the ETF had brought permanent institutional money. This year stress-tested both, and neither held. It did not move like gold. The institutions moved like a trade.
So the next cycle inherits one question, and it is no longer about price. Is Bitcoin an exit from the financial system, or the highest-beta asset trapped inside it.
$BTC
$XAUT
Bitcoin peaked at 126,000 dollars last October. It now trades near 60,000, a fall of more than 50 percent. Over the same stretch gold set records and the S&P 500 rose about 10 percent. The asset sold as the hedge against a broken monetary system dropped hard while the original hedge, gold, soared, and while ordinary stocks climbed.
The single-week ETF outflow everyone is posting is the least of it. As Bitcoin's price halved and money flowed out, the spot ETFs launched in 2024 as proof that institutional money had finally arrived now hold 73 billion dollars. A large share of what once looked like conviction was never a directional bet. It was the basis trade, long the fund and short the future to capture a spread, and when the spread closed, that money left.
The believers are bleeding too. Strategy, the largest corporate holder, owns about 847,000 Bitcoin at an average cost near 75,600 dollars, underwater since February by roughly 13 billion. In June, with preferred dividends coming due, it did what Michael Saylor swore it never would. It sold Bitcoin, 32 coins, to make a payment.
None of this means Bitcoin is finished. A fall this size is ordinary in its history. It has survived drops of 77 and 85 percent and returned higher every time. Long-term holders & Bitcoin Maxis keep accumulating, and cumulative ETF inflows since launch are still positive by more than 50 billion dollars.
Two claims were supposed to make this cycle different. That Bitcoin had become digital gold, and that the ETF had brought permanent institutional money. This year stress-tested both, and neither held. It did not move like gold. The institutions moved like a trade.
So the next cycle inherits one question, and it is no longer about price. Is Bitcoin an exit from the financial system, or the highest-beta asset trapped inside it.
$BTC
$XAUT
