If Billionaires Are Buying Bitcoin Hand Over Fist, Why Isn't the Price of Bitcoin Soaring?

Key Points

Billionaires are buying as much Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) as they possibly can. Michael Saylor, founder and executive chairman of Strategy (NASDAQ: MSTR) , seemingly makes a new Bitcoin purchase every week. Other billionaires are embracing the Bitcoin treasury company model to buy Bitcoin for their companies.

In theory, all of that new buying pressure should be sending Bitcoin to the stratosphere. But Bitcoin still trades for less than $110,000, short of its record high of about $112,000. Ever since it hit that all-time high in May, Bitcoin has barely budged. So why isn't the price of Bitcoin soaring?

Macroeconomic uncertainty

The easiest answer, of course, is macroeconomic uncertainty about the Trump administration's proposed trade tariffs. In April, President Donald Trump promised "90 deals in 90 days," and it's now looking like that's not going to happen. So tariff uncertainty is not going away anytime soon.

If Billionaires Are Buying Bitcoin Hand Over Fist, Why Isn't the Price of Bitcoin Soaring?

On top of that, Trump continues to call for lower interest rates, as well as the possible replacement of Jerome Powell as chairman of the Federal Reserve. According to the White House, lowering interest rates is the easiest way to juice the financial markets. Until there's a Fed rate cut, the markets may continue to trade sideways.

And don't forget about the One, Big, Beautiful Bill. Even if the bill passes with bipartisan support, not everyone is convinced that it's going to calm financial markets. In fact, it might make financial markets even more uneasy because it would add so much to the U.S. national debt.

Are long-term Bitcoin investors taking profits?

However, in my opinion, macroeconomic uncertainty seems to be a lazy explanation. Surely, there must be something specific going on in the crypto market that is causing the price of Bitcoin to remain under the $110,000 mark?

One possible explanation is that longtime holders of Bitcoin are now taking profits on their crypto positions. According to this logic, investors who bought Bitcoin when it was trading well under $100,000 are now locking in gains.

Bitcoin Magazine recently looked into this, and found that some longtime investors started selling as soon as the price of Bitcoin hit $70,000 last year. That's because they were sitting on enormous profits. Some of them bought Bitcoin when it was trading for less than $10,000.

OK