Saylor Says Bitcoin Slide Is Just Capital Rotation, Not a Breakdown
Bitcoin has tanked over 14% in one week and 22.7% in four weeks. Strategy Chairman Michael Saylor has a simple explanation for the decline: it's capital rotation, not impairment. In a post on X, Saylor pointed to the historic pace of AI infrastructure funding — approximately $400 billion deployed over the past six months — while noting the $4 billion in outflows from the U.S.-listed spot ETFs since mid-May. In essence, he argued that institutions are pulling money out of bitcoin and deploying into AI, leading to weakness in the top cryptocurrency. This matters because rotation implies temporary weakness, driven by capital chasing a hot theme before it eventually finds its way back, ideally into something with fewer GPU requirements. "Volatility creates opportunity," Saylor said, a characteristically bullish framing from the most prominent corporate bitcoin holder on the planet.
Saylor's Strategy recently sold 32 $BTC, a move analysts say added to the bearish sentiment in the market and deepened the price selloff. The publicly listed firm still holds 843,706 $BTC, a stack that continues to defy both gravity and basic arithmetic. While some analysts have flagged the AI boom as a headwind for bitcoin, most bears have drawn a darker conclusion from the recent selloff: that crypto is simply broken. "Bitcoin just looks broken at this point Even Saylor is selling now," pseudonymous trader QE Infinity said on X, capturing the mood of a community that treats 32 BTC like a fire sale at the Fed. Their case probably rests on a confluence of concerning signals: Saylor's surprise sale of 32 $BTC, weeks of heavy ETF outflows, and the striking fact that almost every major asset class, from equities to commodities, is trading at or near record highs while bitcoin languishes in its own private bear market.
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