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#Gate广场四月发帖挑战 The global market is in panic, but Bitcoin is surging against the trend: this time, is it really different?
The global markets are crashing collectively, but Bitcoin is rallying against the trend—rising $1,800 in 30 minutes, liquidating $113 million in shorts in one hour!
The market has changed its game.
Behind it, there’s actually a big story—Bitcoin’s ownership structure is quietly reshuffling.
On Wall Street, there’s a broker named Bernstein who specializes in this. They released a report last week, with the core point summed up in one sentence: "Bitcoin is no longer for retail investors."
How so?
Look at the data: the "whale wallets" holding over 10k BTC have experienced net inflows for the second time since 2026.
BnCEO Richard Tenk even directly posted a chart on X, saying, "Since mid-February, long-term holders have started accumulating again."
The word "accumulating" is very important.
For a long time before, what were these old players doing? Selling. Selling desperately.
From the peak in 2025, it’s said that long-term holders have offloaded 7 to 8 million BTC.
Now? They’re not selling anymore—they’re starting to buy.
What does this signal mean? Insiders know, there’s a saying in crypto: "Smart money always runs first."
Those holding over 10k BTC and still holding are mostly from the 2015 batch.
Back then, Bitcoin was only two or three hundred dollars. Would you sell at a loss? Impossible.
So when these people stop selling and start buying again, the market bottom isn’t far off.
It’s really institutions buying.
Three solid proofs: this time, it’s truly institutions buying.
It’s easy to say "institutions are here," but you need evidence. And there’s more than one.
First signal: ETFs are crazy.
BlackRock and those guys really know how to make moves.
In early 2024, when the US SEC approves a spot Bitcoin ETF, these Wall Street veterans will rush in like sharks smelling blood.
By Q1 2026, spot Bitcoin ETFs have accumulated over $100 billion in assets, with BlackRock leading the charge—one product, IBIT, alone accounts for over $10k.
Even more outrageous, on April 6th, there was a single-day net inflow of $471 million.
What does that mean? Retail investors are still panicking, but institutions are already counting their money.
Second signal: Strategy is still buying.
Michael Saylor might be the most bullish person on Bitcoin on Earth right now.
His company, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), has been buying Bitcoin since 2020 and continues to do so.
As of the end of March 2026, Strategy holds over 760k BTC, with an average cost of over $70k per coin.
What’s the current market price? Over $60k.
Yes, you read that right, they’re showing a paper loss. But does Saylor care? Not at all.
In mid-March, he bought another 22,337 BTC, costing $1.57 billion, at an average of $70k each.
Last week, he made another move, buying $76.6 million worth, adding over 1,000 BTC into the warehouse.
Bernstein’s analysts gave him a nickname: "The Bitcoin’s Last Lender Central Bank"—when the market falls, he supports; when the market is confused, he adds more.
You think he’s foolish? Maybe he really doesn’t care about short-term ups and downs.
What he cares about is how many of these 21 million BTC he can get his hands on.
Third signal: Japan is playing a bigger game.
Metaplanet, a Tokyo-listed company, might be even more aggressive than Strategy.
Their CEO, Simon Gerovich, said: "Our goal is to hold 100k BTC by the end of 2026, and 210k BTC by 2027."
210k BTC is exactly 0.1% of the total Bitcoin supply limit.
By Q1 2026, Metaplanet already holds 40,177 BTC.
What’s the concept? They only started accumulating in April 2024—just two years from zero to over 40k BTC.
And their approach is very interesting—they buy by issuing bonds, issuing more shares, and selling options to buy more.
Left hand financing, right hand accumulating, forming a self-reinforcing flywheel.
You call it gambling or strategy, but the Japanese clearly treat Bitcoin as a hedge against the long-term devaluation of the yen.
Bitcoin is completing its "coming of age."
I found an interesting phenomenon:
What did people look at before to judge Bitcoin’s rise and fall? Tesla’s stock price, Nasdaq futures, Fed jawboning.
Now?
It’s starting to move together with gold.
This is a truly fascinating change.
When Bitcoin was created, its founders designed it as "peer-to-peer electronic cash," aiming to replace Visa and PayPal.
Later? The price soared too high, no one wanted to use it for groceries anymore, and the title "digital gold" became more and more popular.
But the label "digital gold" was mostly shouted by crypto insiders themselves.
Now it’s different—Morgan Stanley is about to launch a Bitcoin ETF, and through their wealth advisory network, high-net-worth clients will soon see Bitcoin allocation options in their official investment advice.
Pensions, family offices, sovereign funds—these traditional financial "Old Money" are increasingly entering.
Bernstein’s analysts said plainly: "We believe Strategy’s treasury model plus ETFs have completely changed Bitcoin’s ownership structure."
Meaning: in the future, Bitcoin’s price movements will be more and more driven by the allocation needs of these big players, rather than retail investors’ emotions.
Two variables to watch:
First, ETF capital flows. The $471 million single-day inflow isn’t normal, but if it continues, it shows Wall Street really takes this seriously.
Second, RWA tokenization. You might be unfamiliar with this term, but the trend is already emerging—real-world assets (government bonds, gold, even real estate) are being tokenized and moved onto the chain, with Bitcoin likely becoming the value anchor of this new system.
When that day comes, Bitcoin’s role won’t be just "digital gold."
Returning to the initial question: why is Bitcoin rising against the geopolitical turmoil?
On the surface, it’s because institutional buying supports the price pressure; deeper down, it’s because Bitcoin is undergoing a transformation—shifting from a "high-risk, high-volatility" speculative asset to a strategic asset for hedging geopolitical risks and currency devaluation.
This shift won’t happen overnight, but the trend is already clear.
Today’s Bitcoin is probably in this "coming of age" painful phase.