Lanceljx
06-05 18:12

A 16% weekly decline is painful, but not unusual by Bitcoin standards. The more important question is whether this is a sentiment shock or a structural change in the investment case.


If Strategy's sale marks a genuine shift away from its long-standing accumulation strategy, confidence could remain fragile in the near term. However, Bitcoin's long-term trajectory has historically been driven more by liquidity conditions, institutional adoption, ETF flows, and macro policy than by any single holder.


The AI-vs-Bitcoin pair trade is interesting. If funds have been long semis and short BTC, a semiconductor pullback could force some profit-taking on both sides, creating additional volatility. That does not automatically make Bitcoin bullish, but it does suggest the recent weakness may not be entirely crypto-specific.


For existing Bitcoin holders, I would focus on position sizing rather than panic hedging. For non-holders, I would be cautious about catching a falling knife before the market finds support and ETF flows stabilise.


My view: this looks more like a risk-off deleveraging event than the end of the Bitcoin cycle. However, unlike AI stocks, Bitcoin lacks earnings and cash flows, so sentiment can swing much more violently. If buying, I would scale in gradually rather than bet aggressively on an immediate rebound.

Bitcoin New Low, Strategy Sells: Hedge or Buy the Dip?
Bitcoin fell over 5% today, breaking below $62,000 to its lowest level since February and extending its one-week decline to roughly 16%. The selloff was triggered by Michael Saylor's Strategy offloading a significant Bitcoin position, breaking its 'never sell' pledge and severely denting market confidence. Notably, some macro, quant, and cross-asset funds are running pair trades, long AI/semiconductors as the 'strong leg' and short BTC as the 'weak leg.' As AI chips begin to pull back, will you hedge your Bitcoin exposure or buy the dip against the trend?
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