Analysis: The rise in U.S. Treasury yields weakens the market's willingness to allocate to Bitcoin
Analysis suggests that the rise in U.S. Treasury yields and bond yields in major global economies is weakening the market's willingness to allocate to high-risk, non-yielding assets like Bitcoin. At the same time, influenced by the situation in Iran, concerns about potential supply risks in the Strait of Hormuz are heating up, and some speculative funds are flowing into the commodities market for crude oil, copper, and sulfur.
Market data shows that Bitcoin has dropped over 3% in the past 24 hours, retreating about 10% from its peak of approximately $82,500 on May 6. As the market declines, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs continue to experience outflows. This week, U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs saw a net outflow of about $1.26 billion, marking the largest single-week outflow since January of this year, with the previous week also seeing outflows close to $1 billion, bringing the total net outflow over the past two weeks to more than $2.26 billion. Additionally, there are views that funds may be shifting towards potential IPO-related trades for SpaceX, with the trading volume of some blockchain-based SpaceX IPO pre-market derivatives already reaching millions of dollars.







