Bitcoin Tops $100,000 Again. Is the Leading Cryptocurrency Entering a New Bull Market Cycle?


  • Amid signs of improvement in the global trade situation, Bitcoin just hit $100,000 again.

  • Gains for Bitcoin could be fleeting if there is not substantial improvement in the overall macroeconomic outlook.

  • If history is any guide, Bitcoin could be nearing the end of the bullish phase of its four-year cycle.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Bitcoin ›

On news of positive developments on the global trade front, Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) once again regained the $100,000 price level. The euphoria in the crypto market was palpable, and just about every top cryptocurrency moved higher as soon as the first trade deal was announced.

The new thinking is that Bitcoin is about to go on another one of its famous bull market runs, taking it to new all-time highs. But is that really the case?

While the White House’s announcement of a new trade deal with the U.K. is certainly reason for optimism, a closer reading of the “deal” reveals that it is really more of an agreement, and that tariffs are not going away.

Moreover, as skeptics are pointing out, Great Britain accounts for only a small percentage of all U.S. trade, and the U.S. actually has a trade surplus with Great Britain. On the other hand, signing the first trade deal with a key Asian trading partner, with whom the U.S. had a trade deficit, would have been much more bullish.

Orange Bitcoin logo under the Wall Street street sign.
Image source: Getty Images.

It’s also been less than 48 hours since Fed Chairman Jerome Powell warned of slowing economic growth and higher prices as a result of tariffs. We haven’t seen any direct economic effects from the tariffs yet, but the warning signs on the horizon are ominous. If dozens of new trading deals aren’t signed within the next 60 days, any gains in Bitcoin could be fleeting.

However, the case for Bitcoin entering a new bull market cycle becomes much stronger when you consider the pace of institutional adoption. The best way to see institutional adoption in action is by looking at investor inflows into the spot Bitcoin ETFs. These inflows turned negative during the peak of tariff uncertainty, but have since turned positive.

In fact, there’s now more money flowing into the spot Bitcoin ETFs than into gold ETFs. That’s particularly striking, given that gold has outperformed Bitcoin this year. Gold is also the one safe haven asset that you typically want to be holding during times of economic and geopolitical uncertainty. So it speaks volumes that investors now appear to be buying more Bitcoin than gold.

You can also measure the pace of institutional adoption by tracking the growing number of corporations adding Bitcoin to their balance sheets. Leading the way is MicroStrategy (NASDAQ: MSTR), the company now doing business as Strategy, which continues to load up on Bitcoin. There are also a growing number of “MicroStrategy copycats,” which are following the same strategy of buying as much Bitcoin as they can.


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