Markets got a jolt this week after President Trump announced a pause in the conflict with Iran, calling on the Department of War to postpone military strikes against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure for a five-day period.
Oil prices plunged roughly 10% on the news, while stocks rallied and Bitcoin caught a bid to top $71,000 in the morning.
But as we discussed last week, the more telling chart right now might not be Bitcoin by itself — but rather the rotation away from gold.
The Wall Street Journal documented the largest gold ETF, GLD, seeing a significant top in terms of flows, with $6 billion coming out of that fund since the conflict began. That’s the rotation trade that Falcon X’s Josh Lim flagged on Coinage last week, arguing the move from gold into Bitcoin had bottomed.
Over the last month, Bitcoin has rallied some 9% while gold has retreated 15%.
Despite the geopolitical noise, digital asset investment products recorded their fourth consecutive week of net inflows. CoinShares’ latest data showed $230 million coming in last week — a step down from the prior three weeks, but positive nonetheless. Bitcoin led the way with $219 million, and Solana notched seven straight weeks of inflows.
On the DAT side of things, BitMine — led by Tom Lee — returned to the market with roughly $142 million in ETH purchases. The company has a stated goal of accumulating 5% of Ethereum’s total outstanding supply, what they call “the alchemy of 5%,” and they’re now at 3.86% — about 77% of the way there.
Tom Lee, for his part, remains firmly in the bull camp, arguing that crypto has exited what he’s been calling a “mini-winter” and that a positive March is still on the table. The Iran news, if it holds, plays directly into that thesis.
Meanwhile, Strategy’s Michael Saylor also continues to buy with the company’s latest purchase coming in at $77 million. His lifetime tracker shows paper losses now exceeding $3 billion, down about 5%. The question hanging over both Saylor and Lee’s purchases is the same one that keeps institutional allocators cautious: What happens to the floor when the biggest buyers slow down?
Strategy, for its part, filed a $42 billion at the market (ATM) offering building on its prior raises to ensure its firepower stays strong. The company revealed it plans to split the asks between $21 billion of Class A common stock (MSTR) and $21 billion of its Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock, or Stretch (STRC), according to the company's paperwork.
Sam Bankman-Fried’s mother, Barbara Fried, sat down with CNN this week to make the case for a presidential pardon for her son following the collapse of his crypto exchange FTX.