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Billionaires Are Gobbling Up Bitcoin—So Why Isn’t the Price Skyrocketing?

Billionaires Are Gobbling Up Bitcoin—So Why Isn’t the Price Skyrocketing?

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-07-31 20:06:00
9
3

The crypto conundrum: Silicon Valley billionaires and Wall Street whales are loading up on Bitcoin like it’s a Black Friday sale—yet prices refuse to moon. What gives?

Market mechanics vs. hype cycles

Even whale-sized buys get diluted across global exchanges. A $100M purchase moves needles less when daily trading volumes top $50B. Plus, institutional accumulation often happens via OTC desks—avoiding public order books entirely.

The paper hands effect

Every billionaire buyer seems to trigger a thousand retail traders panic-selling at 3% gains. Thanks to leverage, these mini-flushes constantly offset big-money inflows.

Derivatives dampening volatility

With $25B in open Bitcoin futures positions, market makers systematically suppress price swings—the very volatility speculators crave. Irony tastes like hedge fund champagne.

So when does the dam break?

History says these accumulation phases precede violent upside—but only after weak hands get shaken out. Until then? Enjoy the discount while Wall Street‘s algo-traders pretend they‘re not front-running the Fed. Again.

Big buyers can still make a small splash

Let's start with the numbers everyone quotes.

By mid-July, Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) vacuumed up $14.8 billion in cumulative net inflows since January 2024, with one fund pulling in $1.3 billion in just two trading days.

When Strategy buys a massive stash, it does so via over-the-counter (OTC) brokers that source coins directly from miners or large holders, keeping those transactions off public order books. The same "invisible" route applies to ETFs, which are assembled by purchases from a handful of authorized participants rather than on mainstream exchanges.

A gold coin with the Bitcoin logo sits on top of a stock chart on a tablet computer.

Image source: Getty Images.

That means demand often bypasses the venues where the quoted price is discovered, namely major crypto exchanges.

Meanwhile, newly mined supply continues to flow, albeit at a slower rate than before the 2024 halving. Opportunistic miners regularly sell part of their output to cover power bills or other operating costs, especially now that break-even costs run above an estimated $45,000 per coin for the largest public mining operators. Given that miners have held bitcoin since much lower prices in anticipation of the higher-priced period we're now in, it makes perfect sense that they'd be exiting at least some of their position to secure their profits and guard against the losses that would be caused by any kind of drawdown.

Add in routine profit-taking from whales and short-term investors, and it becomes clear why even billion-dollar tickets might not launch a moonshot.

Macro uncertainty is high on a weekly basis now

The biggest brake on Bitcoin's price right now is the high degree of global macroeconomic uncertainty that originates from the trade policies of the United States.

President TRUMP has given trade partners until Aug. 1 to cut fresh trade deals or face tariffs, a deadline that keeps shifting with every tweet and off-the-cuff remark, along with revisions to the supposed penalties for noncompliance. Investors know perfectly well that a single improvised policy pivot could yank global supply chains and extinguish risk appetite instantly -- or send it into maximum overdrive.

That whiplash is already visible. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's stop-and-go negotiations with China have seesawed between 0% and 100% tariffs on critical imports, as well as less-critical but relevant imports like Bitcoin mining hardware. Markets typically hate binary outcomes, so money keeps shuttling from risk assets into cash the moment headlines sour, then back again when the next headline inevitably signals a softer approach to negotiations.

Some experts, including those at Wharton's Budget Project, figure these tariff policies will lead to decreased growth that could be even harsher than doubling the corporate tax rate WOULD be. Such forecasts understandably spook shorter-term holders, who tend to dump Bitcoin whenever growth expectations lurch lower, reinforcing sharp drawdowns.

It's important to note that there aren't going to be any tariffs levied against Bitcoin or its mining specifically.

This kind of macroeconomic stress typically drags on Bitcoin until conviction buyers step in and procure coins for long-term holding. In other words, volatility is the toll paid by investors who can't commit to holding through the policy storm.

For those with a multiyear horizon, the disarray may be a buying opportunity. For everyone else, it's a rough ride. So keep your focus on the longer term and plan your investing strategy accordingly.

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