Breaking 09:20 Musk restructures xAI into four divisions amid cofounder departures 08:50 Ukraine warns of nuclear disaster risk at Zaporizhzhia plant 08:00 Italy declines to join Trump’s board of peace citing constitutional constraints 07:50 Wrexham sells minority stake to Apollo Sports Capital 07:40 Canada school shooting: Investigators examine profile of 18-year-old suspect 07:20 Venezuela moves toward adopting historic amnesty law amid political tensions 18:50 France expands humanitarian visas for Iranians fleeing crackdown 18:00 Meta prepares Instants app to rival Snapchat with ephemeral media 17:50 Sanctioned oil tankers shift to Russian flag amid Western seizures 17:20 Iran marks revolution anniversary amid protests and nuclear talks 16:50 Palo Alto Networks closes $25 billion CyberArk deal, plans Tel Aviv listing 16:20 Russian airlines evacuate tourists and halt Cuba flights 15:50 China tests Long March 10 rocket in step toward 2030 moon landing 15:08 Disney CEO designate plans film premieres inside Fortnite 15:02 Netanyahu urges Trump to widen Iran talks beyond nuclear issue 14:50 China top chipmaker warns of crisis as AI drives memory shortage 14:20 Poland declines to join Trump Peace Council 13:50 Qatar emir and Trump discuss Middle East de escalation efforts 13:30 Russia warns of countermeasures over potential militarization of Greenland 12:50 Ye to stage first European concerts in over a decade 12:20 Russian Arctic resort becomes hub for sanctioned LNG tankers 12:00 United States to deploy troops in Nigeria for military training 11:50 Russia oil revenues hit lowest level since pandemic 10:30 Israeli journalist removed from Netanyahu’s Washington flight over security concerns 10:20 Novatek profit plunges 62 percent as sanctions hit LNG business 09:50 Tesla files criminal complaint against German union representative

Deutsche Bank sees Bitcoin selloff as fading conviction

Friday 06 - 08:20
By: Dakir Madiha
Deutsche Bank sees Bitcoin selloff as fading conviction

Deutsche Bank analysts attribute Bitcoin's sharp decline this year not to a single macroeconomic shock but to a gradual erosion of institutional and regulatory confidence. In a note released Wednesday, they highlighted three key drivers: sustained outflows from spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds, a breakdown in the cryptocurrency's correlations with traditional assets, and stalled progress on comprehensive crypto legislation in Congress. The price has dropped over 40% from its October 2025 peak, marking the fourth straight monthly loss the longest such streak since before the pandemic.

Institutional selling exerts the most immediate pressure. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen massive and persistent outflows since October, totaling more than $7 billion in November, around $2 billion in December, and over $3 billion in January. By early February, these funds had shed about $6 billion in net capital since late 2025, the longest sustained redemption period since their launch. "These steady sales signal that traditional investors are losing interest and broader pessimism toward cryptocurrencies is deepening," the analysts wrote. The resulting supply-demand imbalance floods the market with roughly two months of new mining output monthly, forcing other buyers to absorb the excess.

Bitcoin's role as "digital gold" faces scrutiny. While gold surged over 60% in 2025 on central bank purchases and safe-haven demand, Bitcoin ended the year down about 6.5%, noted analysts Marion Laboure and Camilla Siazon. Its correlation with stocks has fallen to mid-teen levels, far below past selloffs when it mirrored tech shares closely. Regulatory uncertainty compounds the issues. The bipartisan Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act remains stuck in Congress amid disputes over whether exchanges and third parties can offer yields on stablecoin holdings. A White House summit this week failed to bridge the gap between banks and crypto firms. Deutsche Bank says this legislative pause has reversed prior market stability gains, pushing 30-day Bitcoin volatility above 40%. The bank's surveys show U.S. consumer crypto adoption slipping to around 12% from 17% mid-2025.

Deutsche Bank cautions against overinterpreting the downturn. Even after this pullback, Bitcoin trades about 370% higher than early 2023 levels, reflecting the speculative premium built during the rally. "This phase represents a correction rather than a collapse a test of whether Bitcoin can mature beyond belief-driven gains and regain regulatory and institutional support," the bank stated.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.