Bitcoin is undergoing a sharp decline despite Wall Street backing, regulatory support, and institutional inflows. By Monday, the world's largest cryptocurrency had erased nearly all its year-to-date gains, shedding approximately $600 billion in market value over six weeks after peaking at $126,000 on October 6. The speed and intensity of this sell-off have defied expectations for a market supposedly stabilizing through mainstream adoption.
Amid the turmoil, Strategy Inc. (formerly MicroStrategy), the largest corporate Bitcoin holder, increased its exposure. The company disclosed a $835.6 million purchase last week—its biggest weekly buy since July 2023—bringing its total holdings to 649,870 BTC worth about $61.7 billion. However, this failed to lift market sentiment. Bitcoin tumbled below $92,000 during Monday's U.S. trading session, marking a seven-month low and a 27% drop from its October record.
Notably, Strategy's market capitalization has fallen to $59 billion—below its Bitcoin holdings' value—signaling the breakdown of its premium-driven financing model. This downturn is testing not just retail confidence but Wall Street's long-term conviction in Bitcoin as an allocatable asset, compounded by ETF outflows, deleveraging, and shifting macro risk appetite.
The sell-off unfolded against a seemingly favorable backdrop: Wall Street engagement, ETF adoption, and political support. Yet Bloomberg data shows $600 billion vanished from Bitcoin's market cap since October, leaving traders scrambling for explanations. Analysts note Bitcoin now behaves more like a macro asset, reacting to liquidity conditions rather than supply dynamics.
The debate intensifies around Bitcoin's four-year halving cycle, which historically preceded speculative rallies. The 2024 halving was followed by an October peak, but with institutional players dominating, the old playbook may no longer apply. Bitwise's CIO Matthew Hougan warns retail investors, burned by previous cycles, might prematurely exit the market.
ETF investors face a critical test as Bitcoin breaches its 365-day moving average, putting average cost basis at risk. Bloomberg estimates show U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs' aggregate breakeven point around $89,600—a level that could trigger amplified outflows if breached. Crypto ETPs have seen $2.56 billion in outflows this month despite $58.3 billion annual inflows.
Strategy's aggressive buying—funded partly through €620 million perpetual preferred shares—highlights strains in its business model. Its mNAV ratio (market cap to Bitcoin holdings) collapsed from 2.5x to 0.95x, undermining its ability to raise premium capital. Shares have fallen 32% this month but remain up 1,500% since August 2020.
Executive Chairman Michael Saylor dismissed sell-off concerns, emphasizing accelerated purchases. The company has evolved its financing from equity sales to convertible bonds and now European debt offerings. As Bloomberg Intelligence notes, Bitcoin appears to be the "tip of the risk-asset iceberg melting" amid record highs elsewhere.