Dalio: U.s. Nears Crisis Point As Bitcoin Trapped By American Selling Pressure
- Meanwhile, Wintermute’s desk reports that Bitcoin remains stuck between $85,000 and $94,000 as U.S.
- Gold climbed above $5,066 per ounce on Tuesday while silver surged 6.4% to $110.60, both setting fresh records as investors sought traditional inflation hedges.
- Bitcoin proponents have long argued that crypto fits this profile, yet the asset has failed to attract safe-haven flows amid elevated macro uncertainty.
- Wintermute’s OTC desk identified American selling pressure as the primary force keeping Bitcoin suppressed within its trading range.
What Happened
The billionaire investor’s latest analysis of the “Big Cycle” coincides with Bitcoin’s failure to live up to its “digital gold” narrative, while traditional safe havens surge to all-time highs.
Gold climbed above $5,066 per ounce on Tuesday while silver surged 6.4% to $110.60, both setting fresh records as investors sought traditional inflation hedges.
Dalio warned that “later stages may involve capital controls, reserve freezes, and cross-border restrictions, turning funds into political tools,” conditions that typically favor “freely transferable assets” and investments “prioritizing resistance to freezing and blockades.“
The Federal Reserve announces its policy decision on Wednesday alongside key earnings from Microsoft, Meta, Tesla, and Apple, while Trump’s fresh 25% tariff threat against South Korea adds geopolitical uncertainty.
Market Context
Ray Dalio warned the U.S. stands “on the brink” of transitioning from Stage 5 pre-breakdown to Stage 6 systemic collapse as Bitcoin is trading defensively at $88,000, trapped in a 60-day range by record institutional selling pressure from American counterparties.
Meanwhile, Wintermute’s desk reports that Bitcoin remains stuck between $85,000 and $94,000 as U.S. spot ETF products hemorrhage capital and the Coinbase premium trades at a persistent discount, indicating that domestic institutions are driving bearish momentum.
The analysis comes as Bitcoin trades range-bound for 60 consecutive days, an unusual pattern for an asset class often marketed as protection against exactly the monetary debasement Dalio describes.
Wintermute’s OTC desk identified American selling pressure as the primary force keeping Bitcoin suppressed within its trading range.
“The Coinbase premium confirms it. US counterparties are net sellers, more so than Europe (marginal buyers) or Asia (neutral),” the firm’s market update stated, noting that “ETFs drive momentum in this market; when that bid disappears, you get choppy, directionless price action.“
CryptoQuant’s on-chain analysis suggests the selling pressure also comes from opportunistic profit-taking rather than forced capitulation.
Similarly, exchange whale ratios remain elevated, but deposits fall “well below prior spike highs, implying tactical, price-sensitive distribution rather than all-in capitulation.“
“When uncertainty rises, capital first moves into classic defensive assets. We see this now from gold breaking above $5,000,” Azizov said, adding that “Bitcoin is often called ‘digital gold,’ but in reality, it’s still, first and foremost, a risk asset.“
Why It Matters
Catalyst-Rich Week Could Break Two-Month Deadlock
Multiple macro catalysts converge this week that could finally break Bitcoin from its compressed range.
Details
Dalio’s framework identifies bankrupt government finances and wealth gaps as the “single most reliable leading indicator of civil war or revolution,” conditions he argues now characterize American reality.
Dalio’s Crisis Warning Meets Bitcoin’s Range-Bound Reality
Dalio’s long essay positions current American conditions within Stage 5 of his Big Cycle framework, where “bad financial conditions and intense conflict” precede systemic breakdown.
“We are now clearly on the brink of crossing from Stage 5 (pre-breakdown) to Stage 6 (breakdown),” he wrote, pointing to unsustainable debt loads that force governments to either “print a lot of money, which depreciates its value” or implement painful austerity.
Bitcoin proponents have long argued that crypto fits this profile, yet the asset has failed to attract safe-haven flows amid elevated macro uncertainty.
U.S. Institutions Drive Selling as ETF Flows Turn Negative
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF products recorded their largest weekly outflow since February 2025 last week, reversing the strong inflows that accompanied January’s brief breakout attempt toward $97,000.
The failure of that rally left Bitcoin back in the middle of its established range, with $85,000 serving as tested support.
The Miners’ Position Index printed near -1.5, indicating miners “are now selling less than their 1-year average” after aggressive inventory monetization at $110,000-$120,000 levels.
Speaking with Cryptonews, Arthur Azizov, Founder at B2 Ventures, framed Bitcoin’s weakness within the context of competing safe-haven narratives.