This weekend, the Iran US negotiations in Pakistan ended without a deal. JD Vance confirmed it. The talks collapsed.
Bitcoin dropped 1. 5% to 2% on the news. Oil is back above $110.
The ceasefire that markets had been hoping for did not materialize. And yet, Bitcoin is still at $73,000. Not $65,000.
Not $60,000. Not the collapse that the bears have been predicting for months. $73,000.
And this morning, CoinDesk published something that I think is the most important piece of Bitcoin analysis of 2026. The headline, "The Bitcoin market is splitting in two. On one side, sellers.
Bhutan selling 70% of its Bitcoin holdings, dropping from 13,000 coins to under 4,000. Miners selling to cover costs. Overleveraged companies liquidating to repay debt.
Governments offloading reserves they accumulated at higher prices. On the other side, buyers strategy buying 90,831 Bitcoin over 13 consecutive weeks. ETFs absorbing hundreds of millions per day.
Morgan Stanley opening Bitcoin access to $6. 2 trillion in client assets. Institutions accumulating at a pace that is outpacing everything the sellers can throw at the market.
Two groups completely opposite behavior. Same asset, same price. and which side you are on, which side you understand will determine your financial outcome over the next several years.
Let me show you exactly what is happening and why it matters. Let me start with the sellers because understanding why they are selling is the key to understanding why they're selling is not the signal most people think it is. Bhutan is the most striking example this week.
The small Himalayan kingdom famously became one of the world's largest government Bitcoin holders by mining with its hydro power resources. At its peak, Bhutan held over 13,000 Bitcoin. Today, it holds less than 4,000.
In the past 18 months, Bhutan has sold approximately 70% of its holdings, offloading $215 million worth of Bitcoin this year alone. Why? Not because Bhutan lost faith in Bitcoin.
Because Bhutan is a small country with limited foreign currency reserves and Bitcoin has been its most liquid asset during a period of economic pressure. When you need cash and your most liquid asset is Bitcoin, you sell Bitcoin. That is not a bearish signal about Bitcoin.
That is a signal about Bhutan's fiscal situation. The same logic applies to the miners who are selling. Mining costs are now up to $80,000 per coin in some cases.
At $73,000 per coin, some miners are operating at a loss. They sell not because they think Bitcoin is going lower. They sell because their cost structure forces them to.
And the overleveraged companies, Mara, Riot, Kango. They bought Bitcoin at $100,000 or higher with borrowed money. When the price dropped 47%, their debt did not drop with it.
They sell to service obligations, not to make a statement about Bitcoin's future. Every single seller in this market right now is selling because of their own financial situation, not because of Bitcoin. That distinction is everything.
Let me put a number on this. CoinDesk's analysis this week showed that Bitcoin's price floor depends entirely on a handful of mandated buyers absorbing what everyone else is trying to get rid of. The selling pressure is real.
It is measurable on chain, but it is coming from entities that are financially constrained, not entities making a judgment about Bitcoin's long-term value. When you separate motivated selling from forced selling, the picture changes completely. Forced sellers have a finite supply of coins to sell.
They sell until they cannot sell anymore and then they stop. The coins transfer to long-term holders who will not sell at any price. This transfer from forced sellers to long-term holders is not a crisis.
It is a cleansing. It is how every Bitcoin bare market has ended. Not with a dramatic announcement, not with a single catalyst, but with the gradual exhaustion of everyone who had a reason to sell until only the holders remain.
More than 90% of the people watching this video right now are not subscribed. And I want to say something specific. Understanding the difference between force selling and belief selling is worth more than any price prediction.
The people who understand it know exactly what to do right now. Subscribe, hit the bell, and share this with one person who is confused about why Bitcoin is dropping when the sellers are this obvious. Now, let's continue.
Now, let me tell you about the other side of this split market. The buyers strategy. 766,970 Bitcoin total.
90,831 purchased over 13 consecutive weeks buying every single week regardless of price, regardless of headlines, regardless of whether Iran talks succeed or fail. This is not trading. This is a permanent capital allocation decision based on the thesis that the dollar will continue to debase and Bitcoin supply will remain fixed.
Black Rockck's IBIT, the world's largest Bitcoin ETF, continues to absorb supply. When Bitcoin dips, IBIT inflows increase. When prices fall and retail investors panic, institutional buyers use the dip to accumulate at better prices, the ETF structure has created a systematic buying machine that does not have emotions, does not watch headlines, and does not panic sell.
Morgan Stanley just entered the Bitcoin ETF market. 16,000 financial adviserss can now recommend Bitcoin to their clients. When those conversations start happening at scale, the demand that flows through is not speculative.
It is allocationdriven, systematic, recurring, and SpaceX. This week, we learned that Elon Musk's SpaceX holds 63 million in Bitcoin, 8,285 coins in Coinbase Prime custody. SpaceX is not a Bitcoin company.
SpaceX is a rocket company. And yet SpaceX holds $63 million in Bitcoin because the Treasury management team decided that Bitcoin was a better store of value than the alternative. When rocket companies hold Bitcoin on their balance sheets, you are no longer talking about a niche asset.
Let me talk about the failed Iran negotiations because I think the market's reaction tells us something important. The talks in Pakistan ended without a deal. JD Vance confirmed it.
Bitcoin dropped 1. 5% to 2%. 1.
5% to 2%. Think about that for a moment. A major geopolitical failure, the collapse of ceasefire talks in a war that has been the biggest macro driver of 2026, moved Bitcoin by less than 2%.
6 weeks ago, every Iran headline moved Bitcoin by 5% or more in either direction. Today, a genuine negative development. Talks failed.
No deal. War continues. And Bitcoin drops less than 2% and holds above $73,000.
What changed? The floor changed. The institutional buyers are absorbing every dip before it becomes a crash.
They are not selling because of geopolitics. They are buying because of fundamentals. And their buying creates a price floor that did not exist 6 months ago.
This is Bitcoin maturing in real time. The asset that used to swing 10% on a tweet is now absorbing genuinely bad geopolitical news with a 1. 5% move.
That is not weakness. That is strength. That is what an asset looks like when its ownership base has fundamentally changed.
Think about what the 1. 5% move actually tells you. It tells you that the institutional buyers are large enough and committed enough to absorb the panic selling that bad news triggers.
The retail investors who sold on the news were met by institutional buyers who saw the dip as an opportunity. This is the flywheel that is quietly building. Every time bad news creates a dip, institutions buy the dip.
Every time they buy, they remove more coins from circulation. Every time the supply shrinks, the next dip is shallower than the last. The 1.
5% move on genuinely bad geopolitical news is the consequence of structural changes in Bitcoin's ownership base that have been building for 2 years. I want to update you on something important that happened quietly this week. Wintermute, one of the most sophisticated crypto market makers in the world, published new odds on the Clarity Act.
Their head of policy put the chances of the bill passing at 30% this year. That is down significantly from the 82% prediction markets were showing a month ago. I want to be honest about what this means.
In the short term, a delayed clarity act means the pension funds and insurance companies waiting for regulatory clarity stay on the sidelines longer. The full institutional wave takes longer to arrive. But here is what it does not mean.
It does not mean Bitcoin fails. It does not mean the institutional adoption reverses. It does not mean the supply dynamics change.
Every delay in the Clarity Act is a delay in the arrival of capital that is already committed in principle. The pension funds are not saying we do not believe in Bitcoin. They are saying we cannot allocate until the regulatory framework is clear.
When that framework arrives, whether this year or next year, the capital flows delays change timing. They do not change destination. I want to spend a moment on Bhutan because I think their story contains an important lesson for every Bitcoin holder.
Bhutan did something smart when they started mining Bitcoin with hydro power. They accumulated a hard asset using their natural competitive advantage and built a treasury reserve and then they sold 70% of it, not because it was a bad asset because they had obligations that required liquidity. They were forced to sell the best asset they owned because they needed cash.
This is the lesson. The quality of your conviction means nothing if your financial structure forces you to sell before the thesis plays out. The miners who bought at $100,000 and are now selling at $73,000 are not wrong about Bitcoin.
They are wrong about leverage. Strategy understood this from the beginning. They structured their Bitcoin purchases to allow permanent holding.
They issued equity. They issued preferred stock. They created a balance sheet that allows them to hold through any draw down without being forced to sell.
That financial structure, not just conviction, but structure, is what allows you to be a buyer when everyone else is forced to sell. When you buy Bitcoin, ask yourself, "What circumstances would force me to sell before my thesis plays out? " If any of those circumstances apply to you, then your Bitcoin position is not as strong as your conviction suggests.
Structure your Bitcoin position so that you never have to sell for reasons unrelated to the thesis. Hold only what you can afford to hold through a 50% draw down without financial pressure. Do not use leverage.
That discipline is what separates the people who hold through the cycle from the people who become the forced sellers that everyone else accumulates from. Let me connect all of this to what it means for Bitcoin's next move. When a market splits, when you have a group of forced sellers on one side and a group of conviction buyers on the other, the outcome is almost always determined by one simple question.
Who runs out first? The forced sellers can only sell until they have no more Bitcoin to sell. Bhutan went from 13,000 to 3,954 coins.
At some point, they stop. Miners who are underwater eventually shut down or cut costs. Overleveraged companies either go bankrupt or finish repaying their debt.
Forced selling is finite. It has an end point. The conviction buyers have a different constraint.
Strategy has committed to buying Bitcoin every quarter forever. ETFs hold every coin that flows in. Morgan Stanley advisers are just beginning to have Bitcoin conversations with clients.
Conviction buying in an environment of ongoing monetary debasement and growing institutional adoption is not finite. It grows when the forced selling ends, when Bhutan has sold its last coin, when the overleveraged miners have settled their debt, the conviction buyers will still be there and the price will reflect that. This is the dynamic that has played out in every previous Bitcoin cycle.
2015, 2019, 2023. Forced selling dominates for months, creates fear, creates doubt, creates exactly the conditions where conviction buyers accumulate at discounted prices. And then the forced selling ends, and the conviction buyers are left holding the market.
We are near the end of the forced selling phase. Not at the end, but near it. Let me leave you with this.
The Iran talks failed this weekend. Bitcoin dropped 1. 5% and held $73,000.
Bhutan sold 70% of its Bitcoin. Miners are selling, overleveraged companies are liquidating, and Bitcoin is at $73,000. Not because the market is ignoring the selling, because Strategy, the ETFs, Morgan Stanley, SpaceX, and thousands of individual long-term holders are absorbing every coin that the forced sellers push onto the market.
The Bitcoin market has split in two. Forced sellers on one side, conviction buyers on the other. In every previous Bitcoin cycle, the forced sellers eventually ran out of coins to sell.
And the conviction buyers were left holding a market with shrinking supply and growing demand. The split is visible today. The outcome is visible in history.
Know which side of the split you are on and hold the line.