Author: Wall Street News
Bitcoin has continued to fall recently. It once dropped to $66,123 during the session, hitting a two-month low, and is currently trading at $66,620; Ethereum fell to $1,837 in the same period, a three-month low, and is currently at $1,855.
There are various explanations circulating in the market: ETF outflows, heightened geopolitical tensions, unexpected selling by Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy). According to analysis by Bloomberg analyst Sid Verma, these explanations are all correct, but may only be symptoms. The real problem is deeper—Bitcoin is losing an asset competition.
For a long time, interest rates were near zero, leaving cash idle meant depreciation; stock valuations were too high; AI was still just a concept; and gold's gains were limited. Analysis points out that Bitcoin's competitors back then weren't specific assets, but rather "investor dissatisfaction"—fear of inflation, dissatisfaction with existing options.
But now, the market has changed.
Three Fronts, Bitcoin Losing on All
The analyst describes Bitcoin's situation bluntly: it's now stuck in an "awkward middle ground," being attacked from three sides.
Hedging inflation? Gold wins. Investors worried about inflation are now more inclined to buy gold, energy stocks, and commodity producers, rather than Bitcoin. These assets have physical backing, pricing power, and a more straightforward logic.
Chasing growth? AI wins. Investors seeking high growth can now buy AI beneficiary companies with real revenues and real profits. Bitcoin doesn't generate cash flow and has no advantage in this race.
Gaining crypto exposure? Stablecoins and infrastructure win. Even investors who want crypto exposure don't necessarily have to buy Bitcoin. They can buy exchanges, stablecoin businesses, payment networks, tokenized finance companies—these assets are directly linked to the actual adoption rate of the crypto industry, have operating leverage, and their logic is clearer.
In one sentence: Bitcoin is neither the best safe-haven asset, nor the best growth asset, nor the only crypto asset anymore.
Inflation Has Arrived, but Bitcoin Hasn't Risen
A detail is quite telling.
Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack warned this week that inflation risks may be becoming "more persistent." A few years ago, such a statement would almost certainly have been interpreted by the market as bullish for Bitcoin—high inflation, fiat currency depreciation, buy Bitcoin as a hedge.
But this time, the market didn't react that way.
Investors' response to inflation has changed now—they are more inclined to buy assets with direct exposure to energy, commodities, and pricing power. Bitcoin's "digital gold" narrative is being eroded by real gold and energy stocks.
ETF Outflows and Strategy Selling
Back to the direct triggers of this recent decline.
ETF outflows, Strategy selling—these events themselves are real. But Bloomberg's analysis suggests that treating them as the "cause" is a misreading—they are more like "symptoms," reflecting the same underlying reality: capital has more options, and investors' demands on Bitcoin are also higher.
Investors are becoming more selective: they don't just want "crypto exposure," they want to know what return this exposure brings, why Bitcoin and not something else.
The logic of Bitcoin's bear market is no longer "it's a scam," "it's a bubble," or "it's a failed technology." The new bear market logic is—scarcity alone is no longer enough.








