Bitcoin’s Sell-Off May Carry a Silver Lining

BTC-1.79%
MAY-0.35%

In brief

  • Analysts say Bitcoin’s drawdown reflects positioning and liquidity stress, though views diverge on whether demand will return as metals cool and macro uncertainty persists.
  • Gold and silver’s sharp reversal has prompted some investors to reassess crowded metals trades, with Bitcoin holding relatively steady by comparison.
  • On-chain data shows limited whale accumulation and subdued ETF flows, suggesting the market has cleared leverage but lacks a clear catalyst for renewed upside.

Bitcoin’s latest sell-off is sharpening a familiar market debate over whether the move reflects short-term positioning and liquidity stress, or signals a deeper erosion of Bitcoin’s thesis as a store of value. Analysts broadly agree the drawdown is cyclical rather than structural, but diverge on what comes next and whether Bitcoin is still positioned to absorb capital rotating out of traditional refuges amid macro uncertainty and dollar strength. After Friday’s sharp reversal in metals, when gold slid, and silver posted one of its steepest single-day drops in decades, Bitcoin held relatively steady. Some observers began reassessing whether the recent metals trade had become crowded. Bitcoin has since found a temporary footing, up 3.8% on the day to $78,800, according to CoinGecko data. It remains down 13.6% over the last 30 days.

 While Bitcoin was previously seen as a “beneficiary of strength in gold,” capital that “may have flowed to crypto off such moves instead funneled to silver in recent months,” Martin Gaspar, senior crypto market strategist at FalconX, wrote in an investor note on Monday. “This could revert as silver cools off,” Gaspar warned. Gaspar pointed to policy and flow-driven catalysts that could shape Bitcoin’s near-term trajectory. In the weeks ahead, he said, traders are focused on developments around the U.S. crypto market structure bill.

On the flows side, the analyst said investors are watching for signs of industry support to stabilize the market, pointing to Binance’s plan to convert about $1 billion from its SAFU fund into Bitcoin and to Tether’s gold buys. Zerocap, an Australia-based digital asset trading and investment firm, said Tuesday it holds a “constructive long-term view” on Bitcoin, arguing it retains store-of-value advantages over gold despite its fragile near-term positioning. The firm claimed price action around the world’s largest crypto is “driven more by liquidity and risk management than structural stress,” with Bitcoin acting as a liquidity-sensitive asset rather than showing signs of forced selling. Alex Thorn, head of firmwide research at Galaxy Digital, offered a more cautious read. Bitcoin’s current slide shows liquidation-driven weaknesses, with “little evidence of significant accumulation from whales or long-term holders,” Thorn wrote, noting that long-term holder profit taking “has begun to notably abate.” Conviction and purpose Analysts in conversation with Decrypt largely agree that Bitcoin’s sell-off reflects short-term positioning and liquidity, while differing on how likely capital is to rotate back into crypto. While Bitcoin’s sell-off could be “driven by short-term positioning and liquidity,” instead of “weakening fundamentals,” a rotation into metals indicates “macro allocation shifts rather than capitulation,” Vincent Liu, chief investment officer at Kronos Research, told Decrypt. The thesis behind Bitcoin being a store of value “remains intact with strategic holders holding conviction,” Liu noted. A rotation from metals into crypto could happen later in the year, he noted.

“As time passes, Bitcoin seems to be absorbing the downsides of gold, while gold is absorbing the advantages of Bitcoin,” Siwon Huh, researcher at Four Pillars, told Decrypt. Gold has “improved its liquidity through tokenization” and is now being “connected to yield farming and collateralized lending via DeFi,” Huh said. Huh noted how the metals market has exhibited extreme volatility and recorded its largest drop in 40 years. “The spillover from this massive sell-off spread to the highly leveraged crypto market, precipitating the current situation,” he said. Other analysts say Bitcoin needs a clearer, defensive use case to reclaim its role as a store of value. “We need to define the purpose of a ‘store of value.’ It is a refuge when other assets are expected to decline,” Ryan Yoon, senior research analyst at Tiger Research, told Decrypt. Bitcoin ETFs, for instance, make Bitcoin “highly accessible,” Yoon said, noting that “many data companies fail to create a trend of reasons to save Bitcoin, giving it a gambling image.” “We need the next El Salvador, and we should hope that the backlash against the impending strong dollar regime will be directed toward Bitcoin, not gold,” he said. A silver lining? On-chain data offers one potential silver lining, though not the metals rotation some analysts expect.

Over 22% of Bitcoin’s circulating supply sits at a loss following January’s slide, according to a Glassnode report. The condition could amplify downside pressure as options dealers hedge by selling into falling prices, reinforcing the move lower. For now, that rotation appears to be too weak to reverse the pattern. Spot ETF flows are near zero, while options markets are pricing more downside protection, suggesting traders see risk without necessarily believing Bitcoin serves as a safe haven, as analysts point out. The silver lining emerges alongside the market’s clearing of leverage-driven sellers without panic, leaving the price dependent on whether new demand or policy can actually shore up support, analysts told Decrypt.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Data: In the past 24 hours, the entire network has been liquidated for $292 million, with long positions liquidated for $228 million and short positions liquidated for $64.3351 million.

According to Coinglass data, the total liquidations across the entire network in the past 24 hours reached $292 million, with long positions and short positions liquidated at $228 million and $64.335 million respectively. The liquidations of Bitcoin and Ethereum are particularly notable, affecting 103,284 people, with the largest single liquidation amounting to $4.547 million.

GateNews6m ago

Futures and Options Market Signals Caution as BTC Chases $70K

Bitcoin has inched back toward the $70,000 mark, but traders remain wary as derivatives signals fail to echo the price recovery. On Wednesday, the benchmark cryptocurrency briefly touched the round level after a Tuesday dip to around $62,500, a move that was supported by a fresh wave of inflows

CryptoBreaking7m ago

Gate Daily (February 28): U.S. Department of Justice seizes $580 million in crypto assets; Morgan Stanley applies for crypto custody license

Bitcoin fell back to $65,850 under the influence of US PPI data. As Morgan Stanley actively invests in digital assets and the effectiveness of US anti-fraud enforcement becomes evident, market sentiment has been hit. The rise in PPI has sparked inflation concerns, affecting US stock performance and leading to liquidity shortages in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

MarketWhisper11m ago

Former Mt. Gox CEO proposes a Bitcoin hard fork to recover $5.2 billion

Former Mt. Gox CEO Karpelès proposes a hard fork of Bitcoin to recover approximately 79,956 Bitcoins stolen in 2011. The proposal suggests adding consensus rules to allow funds to be returned to creditors through court proceedings, but it faces concerns about undermining Bitcoin's immutability and the risk of chain splits. This proposal is currently mainly to spark discussion and has not been implemented.

MarketWhisper37m ago

Trump Media sold 2,000 Bitcoins, reducing total holdings to 9,542 Bitcoins

BlockBeats News, February 28 — Arkham analyst Emmett Gallic revealed that Trump Media reduced its holdings by 2,000 Bitcoins, decreasing the total from 11,542 to 9,542 Bitcoins. These Bitcoins were collateralized for hedging transactions and are no longer owned by Trump Media.

GateNews56m ago
Comment
0/400
No comments
Trade Crypto Anywhere Anytime
qrCode
Scan to download Gate App
Community
English
  • 简体中文
  • English
  • Tiếng Việt
  • 繁體中文
  • Español
  • Русский
  • Français (Afrique)
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • 日本語
  • بالعربية
  • Українська
  • Português (Brasil)