The cryptocurrency market has been declining recently, with its total market capitalization falling to approximately $2.2 trillion. Foreign media quoted Jeff Park, Chief Investment Officer of ProCap BTC, as saying that this decline does not necessarily indicate a weakening of the fundamentals of crypto assets, but rather is more likely a move by funds to reposition for the next wave of hot trades.
Park points to fund rotation
Park believes that Bitcoin is being used by some investors as a source of liquidity to support emerging trading themes that are about to heat up in the market. He mentioned that funds may be flowing into hot targets such as SpaceX and Anthropic.
He jokingly pointed out that when there are assets in the market that "everyone wants to hold," investors often sell their more liquid holdings first to fund new positions.
Funds may still return to Bitcoin
Park also stated that these funds may still return to the Bitcoin market in the future. In his view, the temporary weakening of the correlation itself may actually become a driving force for a new round of capital inflows.
The core of this assessment is that the current selling pressure may not necessarily stem entirely from a repricing of the outlook for crypto assets, but is more likely a short-term reallocation of funds across markets.
Approximately $3.83 billion flowed out over 35 days.
AMBCrypto previously analyzed that traditional financial investors have been continuously withdrawing funds from the crypto market, especially Bitcoin, since May, with outflows exceeding the levels of the same period in March and April.
The report noted that approximately $3.83 billion worth of Bitcoin flowed into the market over the past 35 days, while demand continued to weaken during the same period, which further pressured prices.
The analysis suggests that Bitcoin has entered an accumulation phase after its pullback. However, if the daily close remains below $60,000, selling pressure could intensify further, and the price risks falling to $52,250.
Overall, the article attributes the recent market weakness to liquidity being absorbed by other popular trading activities. As demand slows and capital outflows combine, market volatility amplifies.












