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Should You Buy Bitcoin While It’s Under $100,000?


It’s easy to be down on Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) these days. After all, it has fallen more than 20% from an all-time high of $109,000 back in January. And due to ongoing tariff uncertainty, it’s failed to live up to the spectacular hype that surrounded it earlier in the year.

Yet this might turn out to be the last chance you’ll ever get to buy Bitcoin for less than $100,000. There are two fundamental changes taking place right now in the global financial markets, and Bitcoin is core to both of them.

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The first major change involves investor perceptions of Bitcoin. Is it a frothy, speculative digital asset? Is it a risky tech stock or something entirely different?

At the beginning of the year, Bitcoin behaved like a speculative digital asset. Analysts were quick to issue $200,000 price predictions back in January. At the time, the cryptocurrency was trading at about $100,000 and seemed like an obvious, no-brainer candidate to double in value by the end of the year.

But after new tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China were announced by President Donald Trump in late January, Bitcoin started to behave much more like a risky tech stock. In other words, if tech stocks were falling in value one day, then Bitcoin was likely to fall, as well.

As a result, Bitcoin’s price was highly volatile, whipsawing on a daily basis. Every new change in tariff policy showed up in the prices of tech stocks, and that meant every new change in tariff policy also showed up in the price of Bitcoin.

However, something very interesting has been taking place since “Liberation Day,” when Trump unveiled his tariff plans. The price of Bitcoin has largely remained little changed. On April 2, it was trading for $85,000; now, nearly three weeks later, it’s still trading for about $85,000.

Gold Bitcoin pile.
Image source: Getty Images.

That has led to the development of a very interesting investment thesis for Bitcoin: It might be a long-term store of value. In other words, it might actually be digital gold, as Bitcoin enthusiasts have been declaring for years.

Just as gold can provide a hedge against economic uncertainty and inflation, so can Bitcoin, due to its inherent scarcity. This is a point that some top hedge fund managers have been making for months.

That type of thinking has started to filter down into the mainstream investing narrative. Outflows from the spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have started to reverse, with money now flowing back in.

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