CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju has warned that the real threat facing Bitcoin may not be sudden price crashes but rather prolonged periods of market stagnation stretching over years. According to Ju, while sharp corrections can be tolerated with hopes of a rebound, extended inactivity erodes investor confidence and nearly halts new capital inflows into the crypto market.
Ju argues that the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs and increasing regulatory acceptance in the United States have significantly diluted the foundational stories that propelled Bitcoin in its early days. In his view, Bitcoin is now being treated less as a groundbreaking innovation and more as a conventional investment product used by financial institutions, rendering the earlier narratives largely obsolete.
He adds that, instead of acting as a hedge against global crises, Bitcoin is increasingly trading in line with tech stocks. Some early advocates have shifted their focus to other ventures, while rapid advancements in artificial intelligence and rising concerns over quantum computing’s long term impact are further muddling the crypto narrative.
According to CryptoQuant data, despite a period of flat prices, on chain activity on the Bitcoin network has surged to all-time highs. Micro transactions of less than 0.01 BTC now make up about 80 percent of all network activity—a dramatic rise from under half the total transactions in 2023.
This spike in transaction volume, however, does not indicate new investments flowing into the system. Instead, Ju points out that heightened network congestion is mainly due to technical factors, with major players remaining on the sidelines and network activity failing to translate into price support.
The prolonged sideways movement has begun to squeeze large scale investment vehicles. The perpetual buying strategy promoted by Michael Saylor, chairman of the company Strategy, now faces greater vulnerability in a stagnant price environment. The firm’s STRC preferred shares recently dropped to a record low of 85.32 dollars, trading 13 percent below their face value.
Strategy is widely recognized for its substantial Bitcoin holdings on its balance sheet. According to Ju, ongoing market stagnation narrows the premium attached to such Bitcoin based assets, putting pressure on Saylor’s ability to raise additional capital.
At the heart of Ju’s assessment lies the argument that Bitcoin needs a clear and compelling narrative to reignite capital inflows. Without it, the market could face not just price losses, but a longer-lasting drag triggered by waning attention and engagement.
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