Written by: Uchiha Naruto, Deep Tide TechFlow
The Spring Festival holiday has ended, and Bitcoin quietly fell below $64,000.
There was no crash, no black swan event, no exchange or project running away with funds—just the feeling of a dull knife cutting flesh.
It fell a little every day, a little every day, with over a trillion dollars in market value evaporated, yet not even a decent news story emerged.
At this moment, on February 21, Bloomberg published an article titled "Bitcoin's Trillion-Dollar Identity Crisis Is Coming from All Sides," with three core arguments: gold is stealing Bitcoin's macro hedge narrative, stablecoins are stealing its payment narrative, and prediction markets are stealing its speculation narrative.
In my view, Bloomberg is two-thirds right, but the most critical third was missed by Bloomberg.
Some Data You Can't Argue With
Content creators often make a mistake: when they see top-tier media criticizing an asset they hold, their first reaction is "they don't get it," and they start looking for angles to refute it.
However, some of the data in Bloomberg's article is solid.
Over the past three months, U.S.-listed gold and gold-themed ETFs have attracted over $16 billion in net inflows. During the same period, Bitcoin spot ETFs saw outflows of $3.3 billion. This contrast is particularly striking at the beginning of the year, with geopolitical tensions, a weak dollar, and tariff uncertainties—all macro environments where "digital gold" should perform. Instead, safe-haven funds flowed into gold bars.
More specific data: In January 2026, when the Fed signaled a hawkish stance, gold rose 3.5%, while Bitcoin fell 15%. The correlation between the two turned negative at -0.27. If "digital gold" means "rising alongside real gold during crises," Bitcoin failed this test.
Jack Dorsey, the original Bitcoin advocate and Twitter founder, shifting to stablecoins is also not a small matter. His status in the crypto space is undeniable—the person who embedded Bitcoin payments into Cash App's DNA announced support for stablecoins last November.
Polymarket's explosive growth over the past year is also a fact. Betting on elections, tariffs, the Fed—even more compliant than a casino. For those drawn to the "thrill" of the crypto market, this is a faster, more straightforward alternative.
On all these points, Bloomberg is correct.
But...
Bloomberg's article carries an implicit logic: Bitcoin's value comes from the narrative functions it plays. These functions are being taken over by other things, so Bitcoin's value is eroding.
This logic itself has an unspoken premise: it assumes Bitcoin must "win" a specific function to justify its existence.
Even gold can't win under this logic. Gold is not the best payment tool, not the best speculative tool, and in some inflation-hedging scenarios, TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities) are more effective.
But gold is gold. Over thousands of years, no one has demanded it "prove its functionality." Its existence itself is value. Because humanity's obsession with "scarcity, durability, and unforgeability" is more stubborn than any functional argument.
Bitcoin is doing the same thing, but it's only sixteen years old and hasn't yet reached the point of being "taken for granted."
There's a sharp line in Bloomberg's article: "Bitcoin's biggest threat isn't competitors, but diversion. When no single narrative can sustain it, attention, capital, and belief will slowly drain away."
In the short term, this makes sense, but it treats "diversion" and "sedimentation" as opposing forces.
When Bitcoin is no longer the protagonist of hot narratives, those who remain holding it are precisely the ones who don't need narratives. Their reasons for holding are network effects, liquidity depth, regulatory certainty, and the growing list of sovereign-level institutional buying records.
The Overlooked Big Picture
There's one sentence in the article that carries more weight than the rest, but it glides by too easily:
"Bitcoin spot ETFs have made Bitcoin a permanent fixture in investment portfolios."
This has completely changed the holder structure.
Before ETFs, Bitcoin's main holders were retail investors, exchanges, miners, plus a few high-risk-tolerant institutions. These groups are characterized by highly emotional behavior—chasing rallies, fleeing dips. Hence the 84% drop in the 2018 bear market and the 77% drop in 2022.
After ETFs, a new type of money entered: pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, family offices, insurance capital. This money has only one motive for buying: asset allocation. They buy according to their target allocation, then hold without moving. If the market falls, they might even rebalance and buy more against the trend.
Currently, Bitcoin is down over 40% from its peak. To some extent, ETF funds are forming a new support structure at the bottom. Chips are still exchanging hands. A large amount of Bitcoin is flowing from early miners, early hodlers, and industry insiders to institutions. This process is inevitably accompanied by pain.
Bloomberg observed this phenomenon but didn't follow through with the implications. It only saw narratives draining away, not noticing that, simultaneously, the holder structure is shifting from "casino regulars" to "asset allocators."
Where Is the Bottom?
No one knows where the bottom for Bitcoin is in this cycle; we can only guess.
But a few things are more worth observing than the price itself.
The sustainability of ETF fund flows. The current net outflows are short-term data. If they become quarterly sustained outflows, it means institutional allocation demand is shrinking—a real problem. If they stabilize, that's the true signal.
The Bitcoin-to-gold ratio. It's currently in a historically low range, last seen during the March 2020 COVID crash. This ratio itself doesn't predict a rebound, but it describes the degree of relative undervaluation.
Progress on Kevin Warsh's nomination. One catalyst for this decline was the stronger dollar expectation brought by his nomination. How this macro variable evolves directly impacts Bitcoin's pricing as a risk asset.
And one thing Bloomberg didn't mention at all: Discussions at the U.S. federal level regarding a Bitcoin strategic reserve are still advancing. If this materializes, the list of Bitcoin's sovereign holders would expand from El Salvador to the world's largest economy.
Bloomberg's article is well-written, but its problem lies in its perspective. It's a market researcher's perspective, not an allocator's.
Researchers see narrative failure and call it a crisis.
Allocators see narrative failure and call it valuation regression.
Neither perspective is complete.
It's too early to draw conclusions. But one thing is probably right: Bitcoin isn't dying; it's molting.
Molting is really painful.







