Bitcoin’s (BTC) breakout to $93,000 is being driven by deep-pocketed institutions, not retail exchange traded-fund (ETF) buyers, said Coinbase Institutional's John D’Agostino
The rally began in early April, as institutional investors, and sovereign wealth funds quietly accumulated BTC with their "patient pools of capital" while retail investors were still pulling capital from spot ETFs.
“Institutions, sovereigns, patient pools of capital were piling in,” he said. “Retail via the ETF were exiting. So you’ve got to ask yourself, what do the institutions know?”
The company will launch with more than 42,000 BTC and is expected to trade publicly under the ticker “XXI” after merging with Cantor Equity Partners, a $200 million SPAC.
D’Agostino has a three-part thesis as to why this is happening. First is de-dollarization: sovereigns and institutions reduce USD exposure as trade weakens. Second, decoupling from tech: Bitcoin shedding its Nvidia-adjacent identity. Third, hedge basket theory: Bitcoin ranks in the top five in inflation hedge models used by veteran commodities traders.
"Bitcoin is trading on its core characteristics, which again are similar to gold. You've got scarcity, immutability, and non-sovereign asset portability," he continued. "So it's trading the way people who believe in Bitcoin would like it to trade."
Meanwhile, major altcoins like ether (ETH), Solana's SOL, and Cardano's ADA have yet to make similar technical moves. The
This recent move in prices might have pushed back up retail interest in BTC ETFs.