What Just Happened - and Why It Matters
On January 10, 2024, the SEC approved 11 spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds. That sentence reads cleanly now. But getting here took nearly six years of rejected applications, a landmark court ruling, and relentless pressure from BlackRock, Fidelity, ARK Invest, and a half-dozen other asset managers who kept filing and refiling. The approval itself was anything but enthusiastic. SEC Chair Gary Gensler used the announcement to reiterate his view that "Bitcoin is primarily a speculative, volatile asset that's also used for illicit activity." He went further, warning explicitly that the ruling "should in no way signal the Commission's willingness to approve listing standards for crypto asset securities."
So he was basically telling the crypto community: don't get comfortable. Ethereum - and anything beyond it - would face a harder road. But the market, quite reasonably, shrugged off the lecture and focused on what actually got approved. Eleven funds started trading the next morning. And the fee war? It kicked off immediately.
| Fund | Ticker | Issuer | Fee | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| iShares Bitcoin ETF | IBIT | BlackRock | 0.12% | Waived first 12 months / $5B AUM |
| Fidelity Wise Origin | FBTC | Fidelity | 0.25% | Waived through July 2024 |
| ARK 21Shares Bitcoin | ARKB | ARK Invest | 0.21% | Full fee waiver first 6 months |
| Bitwise Bitcoin ETF | BITB | Bitwise | 0.20% | Waived first 6 months / $1B |
| VanEck Bitcoin ETF | HODL | VanEck | 0.25% | 10% of profits to Bitcoin developers |
| Invesco Galaxy | BTCO | Invesco | 0.39% | Waived first 6 months / $5B |
| Franklin Bitcoin | EZBC | Franklin Templeton | 0.19% | Waived through August 2024 |
| WisdomTree Bitcoin | BTCW | WisdomTree | 0.30% | Waived first 6 months / $1B |
| Hashdex Bitcoin | DEFI | Hashdex | 0.94% | Converted from futures ETF |
| Valkyrie Bitcoin | BRRR | Valkyrie | 0.25% | Waived first 3 months |
| Grayscale Bitcoin Trust | GBTC | Grayscale | 1.50% | Converted from trust; ~$27B at launch |
The fee table tells you everything about where the power dynamics sit. BlackRock's IBIT at 0.12% is the most aggressively priced institutional Bitcoin vehicle anyone has ever launched. Grayscale's converted GBTC? Starting at 1.50% - a 12-fold cost disadvantage. That is not a typo. If you've been sitting in GBTC since it traded at deep discounts to NAV, the conversion eliminated the arbitrage that once made it a darling of hedge fund traders, and you're now paying through the nose for the privilege of staying put. And for context on what spot access actually fixes: the previous Bitcoin futures ETF (BITO) underperformed Bitcoin by approximately 3.5% annually just from futures roll costs. That drag is entirely absent from spot ETFs.
88% Were Waiting. Now the Door is Open.
I've been tracking the Bitwise/VettaFi advisor surveys for a while, and the numbers from their October-to-December 2023 poll of 437 financial advisors are worth dwelling on. This data was collected before the ETF was approved. It captures pent-up demand, not a crowd that's already in.
Only 19% of advisors could actually buy Bitcoin for their clients before the ETF existed. Think about that for a second. Four out of five financial advisors who wanted exposure had no compliant way to get it. The math gets wild when you start applying it to real AUM numbers. The survey skewed toward smaller advisors - 60% managed less than $100 million in assets. But even at a conservative mean of $50-$100 million per advisor and a modest 2% Bitcoin allocation, the 437 respondents in this single survey represent $437 million to $874 million of potential Bitcoin inflows. Extrapolate that across the full advisory universe and you're looking at structural demand that dwarfs what the daily spot market can absorb in a hurry.
"Today's ruling is a watershed moment for Bitcoin. The emergence of spot Bitcoin ETFs creates the infrastructure for millions of investors to adopt Bitcoin as an asset class."
- Logan Kane, Seeking Alpha, January 10, 2024Diminishing Returns - Honest Cycle Analysis
Every four years, the block reward paid to Bitcoin miners gets cut in half, reducing how fast new coins enter circulation. Three full cycles have played out. The pattern is consistent. But the magnitudes are shrinking like a photocopier running out of toner, and anyone telling you otherwise is selling something.
Why the decay? It is a function of sheer size. A 100x move on a $12 asset is structurally a different beast than a 100x move on something trading at $42,000. You can't defy gravity forever. From a current base of approximately $42,000 to $48,000, a 2x to 3x return would put Bitcoin somewhere between $85,000 and $90,000 by roughly April 2025. Some folks at the more bullish end cite $100,000 as a base case, and I won't pretend that's impossible - but our synthesis suggests it requires either an exceptional macro tailwind or a pace of ETF inflows that exceeds what most projections currently model.
What the halving framework does tell us clearly: Bitcoin has historically found a recovery price at approximately the 50% mark between each cycle's high and the subsequent bear market low. This cycle settled around $42,500 - right in line with that historical midpoint. And that level held as support through the months leading into February 2024. So the floor, at least, looks like it's where it should be.
"The 100x Bull Market is behind us. Just to be clear, we're bullish on Bitcoin - just that we're not expecting any upside surprises past $100,000 despite the bullishness from the historic spot Bitcoin ETF approval."
- Quanticats, Seeking Alpha, January 17, 2024Global Liquidity - The Variable That Actually Matters
Strip away the ETF hype. Ignore the halving countdown timers on Crypto Twitter. Turn off the social media noise for a minute. What actually drives Bitcoin's price at the macro level? Lyn Alden - who I'd put in the top tier of monetary analysts working on this - has the clearest answer: global broad money supply denominated in US dollars. That's it. Bitcoin, at its core, is an exchange rate. It is the price of a fixed-supply asset relative to a perpetually inflating one. It's like measuring a ruler against a rubber band that keeps getting stretched.
Global liquidity bottomed in 2022. The same year Bitcoin touched its cycle low near $15,000. Not a coincidence. Since then, liquidity has been recovering - not in a rush, but steadily. The Federal Reserve is signalling rate cuts. There's open discussion about ending quantitative tightening. Fiscal stimulus remains elevated globally. These are historically the exact conditions under which Bitcoin does well, because they create the rising tide that lifts its exchange rate against a dollar that's being diluted.
One risk we want to flag clearly: if inflation proves stickier than the current consensus expects - forcing the Fed to delay cuts or (God forbid) resume hikes - the liquidity recovery stalls and Bitcoin's macro tailwind evaporates. That is not the base case as of February 2024. But it is the scenario worth watching most closely. Deflation, oddly enough, might be the more immediately plausible danger. It would likely drag Bitcoin down alongside every other risk asset before the long-term store-of-value thesis has a chance to reassert itself.
The Supply Shock - 65 Days Away
The halving is not a price prediction. It's a supply event, pure and simple. In roughly 65 days from this writing (mid-April 2024), the Bitcoin block reward drops in half: from 6.25 BTC per block to 3.125 BTC. At $48,000 per coin, the current reward schedule generates about $15 billion in annualised selling pressure from miners who have to sell a portion of their rewards to keep the lights on and the ASICs running. After the halving, that selling pressure gets cut in half.
Now layer the demand side on top of this. Within weeks of launching, Bitcoin ETFs collectively held more than 3% of the total Bitcoin supply. Three percent. That's a remarkable rate of absorption for any financial product, let alone one in a brand-new asset class that half of Wall Street still pretends to not understand. As of February 13, 2024, ETFs are hoovering up new Bitcoin faster than miners are producing it. When the halving cuts miner production by 50%, the supply-demand imbalance gets even more lopsided.
Lyn Alden frames the long-term demand picture this way: global wealth management AUM sits at approximately $145 trillion according to PwC. So the real question isn't can Bitcoin hit $100,000 - it's what percentage of that $145 trillion eventually needs a fixed-supply, non-sovereign asset in its portfolio. Even 1% - just one lousy percent - represents $1.45 trillion in demand. That's roughly 1.5x Bitcoin's entire market cap at the time of this writing.
Lyn Alden's Report Card - A-
The most rigorous non-price analysis in our source set comes from Lyn Alden, who scores Bitcoin across five fundamental dimensions - essentially grading the network the way you'd evaluate any piece of infrastructure-grade technology. Her methodology has zero patience for hype. She grades Bitcoin on what it actually does, not what its loudest advocates promise it will do someday. The overall result: an A-minus. Strong, with specific weak spots worth understanding.
Market Cap and Liquidity gets the highest marks, and deservedly so. Bitcoin trades at volumes on par with Apple stock - tens of billions of dollars every day. Its price history shows higher highs and higher lows across every completed cycle. And here is the stat that jumped out at me: over 70% of all Bitcoin hasn't moved on-chain in more than a year. That signals deep long-term conviction among holders, and it effectively shrinks the circulating supply that is actually available for trading.
Technical Security is strong. Not flawless, but strong. The Bitcoin network has maintained 100% uptime since 2013 - longer than the US Federal Reserve's Fedwire system, for perspective. There are over 17,000 publicly reachable nodes, and estimates that include private nodes push the number above 70,000. Compare that to Ethereum's approximately 6,000 nodes, roughly half of which run on cloud providers like AWS (which should probably give people more pause than it does). The weakness Alden identifies is mining pool concentration: the top two pools control roughly 50% of hash rate. Analytically, this is a real risk. But it's regularly overstated - controlling hash rate does not give anyone the ability to steal funds. It only enables potential transaction delays or short-range reorganisations.
Salability and User Experience are improving but frankly remain unfinished business. Bitcoin ATMs increased more than 100-fold from 2015 to 2022. The Lightning Network - Bitcoin's second-layer payment rail - reached usable liquidity levels by late 2020. But here's the uncomfortable part: average December 2023 transaction fees of $19 per transaction mean that 18.7 million wallet addresses holding less than $10 each can't practically move their funds. The coins are just sitting there, locked in by fee economics. This isn't a fatal flaw in the Bitcoin thesis. But it is an honest limitation of where the layer-2 ecosystem sits today.
The View From the Global South
American and European investors tend to look at Bitcoin as a portfolio diversifier. Maybe a speculative growth bet they can tuck into their alternatives bucket. And this is, as Lyn Alden persuasively argues, a fundamental analytical error. Bitcoin's primary use case - for the largest portion of its actual global user base - is something much more urgent than portfolio theory. It's monetary escape. A portable, permissionless store of value for people living in countries where the local currency is garbage, the banking system is restricted, or both.
"If you're an American or European investor in high quality stocks and bonds, and are not thinking about the Bitcoin network from the perspective of a Nigerian, Vietnamese, Argentinian, Lebanese, Russian, or Turkish middle-class saver for example, then you've not yet fundamentally analyzed the asset's use case."
- Lyn Alden Schwartzer, Seeking Alpha, February 13, 2024The evidence is not theoretical. Nigeria's central bank banned crypto-bank interactions in 2021. And what happened? Nigeria simultaneously held the highest global peer-to-peer Bitcoin trading volume during the ban period. Let that sink in. The government banned it, and usage surged. Argentina's newly elected President Javier Milei's team signalled that "Argentina will soon be a Bitcoin haven." El Salvador made Bitcoin legal tender. Organic Bitcoin communities have sprung up in El Zonte (El Salvador), Bitcoin Jungle (Costa Rica), Bitcoin Lake (Guatemala), Bitcoin Ekasi (South Africa), Lugano (Switzerland), and Madeira. These aren't people chasing price action. They are communities using Bitcoin because the monetary system they were born into has failed them.
The Grudging Regulator - and What It Means
The SEC didn't approve spot Bitcoin ETFs because it wanted to. A US Court of Appeals ruled in 2023 that the SEC's simultaneous allowance of Bitcoin futures ETFs and rejection of spot ETFs was "arbitrary and capricious." The court found the SEC had "failed to adequately explain its reasoning." Ouch. Gensler's statement at the time of approval read like a press release from an institution that lost a legal fight, not one that changed its mind. His language about Bitcoin - "speculative," "used for illicit activity," "should not be endorsed" - is worth parsing carefully if you're an investor hoping that broader crypto regulatory clarity is coming anytime soon.
Our reading of where regulation goes from here: Bitcoin, as a non-security commodity with a court ruling and major institutional backing behind its ETF, is on firmer legal ground than any other crypto asset in the US. Ethereum's path to a spot ETF will be longer and thornier. DeFi protocols, NFTs, and most altcoins face an adversarial regulatory environment that could drag on for years. The Bitcoin ETF approval is not a rising tide lifting all crypto boats. It is a specific recognition of one specific asset's specific characteristics. Full stop.
One more thing on the regulatory front that doesn't get enough attention: open-source code - the foundational technology underpinning Bitcoin - has meaningful legal protection as free speech. Lyn Alden's analogy to PGP encryption lands perfectly here. Phil Zimmerman distributed public-key cryptography in the 1990s, was investigated for what the government classified as a munitions export violation, challenged the ruling, and ultimately won. Attempts to ban or restrict open-source financial software run into the same structural wall. Governments can regulate the on-ramps and off-ramps. They cannot eliminate the network itself.
What Could Go Wrong
Scenarios & Research Position
We pulled from six research perspectives to get here - ETF structure, halving mechanics, macro liquidity, network fundamentals, global adoption, and regulatory trajectory. Below is the scenario framework those six views converge on for Bitcoin through the end of 2025.
| Scenario | BTC Price Range | Probability | Key Drivers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear | $28,000 - $42,000 | 20% | Inflation resurgence - Fed tightening - liquidity reversal; GBTC outflows exceed ETF inflows; halving fully priced in |
| Base | $75,000 - $90,000 | 55% | Halving supply reduction; ETF institutional absorption; Fed rate cuts; global liquidity recovery; consistent with diminishing-returns cycle model |
| Bull | $100,000 - $150,000 | 25% | ETF inflows exceed current projections; sovereign wealth / pension allocation begins; aggressive Fed pivot; network adoption accelerates |
The honest caveat: the halving cycle model tells us the era of ten-fold or hundred-fold returns is over. Done. A base case of $75,000-$90,000 by April 2025 is well-supported by both technical cycle analysis and the supply-demand mechanics we've walked through. Getting to $100,000 requires macro tailwinds - specifically, the global liquidity recovery - to stay on their current trajectory without interruption.
Our research position is constructive. The smart approach for most investors is a measured allocation - not panic-buying at $48,000, but also not sitting on your hands waiting for a dip that may never come at any meaningful scale before the halving. Dollar-cost averaging into IBIT or FBTC, sized appropriately for your risk tolerance, is the most defensible path from here. The $145 trillion global AUM pool is not some fantasy number - it is the addressable market that the ETF approval just cracked open.
At $48,000 in February 2024, Bitcoin sits at the intersection of three structural shifts that have never happened simultaneously in its fifteen-year history: regulatory legitimization of spot ETFs, a halving event roughly 65 days out, and a global liquidity environment that - for the first time since the 2021 peak - is turning in Bitcoin's favour instead of against it. The 55% probability weight on the $75,000-$90,000 base case is not optimism. It's a disciplined reading of supply-demand mechanics, institutional onboarding trajectories, and where we sit in the macro cycle. The bear case is real - inflation re-acceleration or a GBTC-driven outflow spiral could push prices back toward $28,000 - and position sizing should reflect that honestly. But the asymmetry is hard to ignore. The structural tailwinds are present. The supply shock is on the calendar. And the pool of capital that has never before had institutional-grade access to Bitcoin? It now does.