Bitcoin may not need a crypto-specific shock to move higher. According to macroeconomist Lyn Alden, the trigger could come from a very different corner of the market: artificial intelligence stocks reaching valuation extremes.
Speaking with Natalie Brunell on the Coin Stories podcast published on YouTube on Thursday, Alden argued that Bitcoin’s next leg up could begin when AI equities become “silly big,” leaving investors searching for alternative upside.
The idea is rooted in classic capital rotation. When dominant assets rise to levels where additional gains are harder to justify, marginal capital tends to flow elsewhere. With Bitcoin trading nearly 46 percent below its October all-time high of $126,100, Alden sees room for that rotation to favor BTC.
AI stocks have been the clear winners of the current cycle. Yet some market participants are starting to question how much further that trade can stretch. Jason Ware, chief investment officer at Albion Financial Group, recently told Fox Business that while Nvidia may deliver another strong quarter, the real question is whether growth can continue to justify higher valuations.
NVIDIA, now the largest company on the Nasdaq by market capitalization, has gained 35.48 percent over the past 12 months, according to Google Finance. Ware described it as “probably the most important company and most important stock in America,” underscoring how concentrated the AI trade has become.
That concentration matters for Bitcoin. Developer Mark Carallo noted that surging interest in AI means Bitcoin is now competing for investor capital in ways it never had to before. In that environment, even small reallocations can have an outsized impact.
Alden emphasized that Bitcoin does not require a flood of new money. “It only takes a marginal amount of new demand,” she said, pointing out that long-term holders tend to absorb supply as short-term traders rotate out. Over time, coins move into what she described as “strongly held hands,” investors unwilling to sell without dramatically higher prices.
Market data reflects that slower dynamic. Bitcoin was trading at $67,849 at the time of publication, down 24.49 percent over the past 30 days, according to CoinMarketCap. The drawdown has been notable, but it has not triggered capitulation.
Alden cautioned against expecting a rapid rebound. Bitcoin, she said, rarely forms V-shaped bottoms outside extraordinary events like the COVID-era stimulus. More often, it establishes a low and grinds sideways, a process she believes is still unfolding, with the possibility of further downside during that consolidation phase.
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