Bitcoin holders are facing renewed pressure following US President Donald Trump's trade tariff announcement, which sent shockwaves through global financial markets, including cryptocurrencies.
Even with Bitcoin (
“Been nibbling on BTC all day, and shall continue,” Hayes wrote on X on April 7 as the Bitcoin price hovered around $75,000.
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He also predicted that Bitcoin’s dominance in the broader crypto market could grow. He expects the current 60.5% share of the market to go toward 70%.
While Hayes is stacking sats during the tariff-fueled market bloodbath, his investment firm, Maelstrom, reportedly sold BTC in December 2024, when Bitcoin traded near its all-time high of about $100,000.
In a blog post titled “Trump Truth,”
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“The gospel of Bitcoin evangelists to never sell and buy every dip is testing the nerves of hodlers,” Petr Kozyakov, co-founder and CEO at the payments infrastructure platform Mercuryo, told Cointelegraph.
Bitcoin price in the past year. Source: CoinGecko
“Amateur retail traders and the citadels of high finance appear equally powerless to second-guess Trump’s next move,” he said.
He added that many traders are waiting on the sidelines, weighing whether the market has been oversold. Despite short-term uncertainty, Kozyakov remains bullish on Bitcoin’s long-term outlook as “the new digital gold.”
“Traders are cautiously waiting on the sidelines for opportunities to re-enter the market and weighing if there may be evidence of overselling.”
Kozyakov is far from being alone in seeing a promising future for Bitcoin as “new digital gold.” ARK Invest founder Cathie Wood is also
Despite the bullish sentiment of Hayes and Wood, others in the crypto community have cautioned that Bitcoin needs more than just a store-of-value narrative to remain relevant.
Jack Dorsey,
“If it [Bitcoin] just ends up being a store of value and nothing more, I don’t think it gains relevance at all,” Dorsey
Jack Dorsey on a “Presidio Bitcoin” podcast episode on April 2. Source: YouTube
To stay relevant, Bitcoin has to maintain its payment use case, he said:
“Otherwise, it’s just something you kind of buy and forget and only use in emergency situations or when you want to get liquid again. So I think if it doesn’t transition to payments and find that everyday use case, it just gets increasingly irrelevant. And that’s a failure to me.”
Despite its volatility largely being seen as a major impediment to its payment use case, Bitcoin continued to be a major
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