Bitcoin Is Set Up for a Strong Rebound, Says Bitwise's Rasmussen

Watch on YouTube ↗  |  February 24, 2026 at 20:42  |  7:26  |  Bloomberg Markets

Summary

  • Bitcoin is currently trading below the average all-in mining cost of ~$80,000, creating severe pressure on the mining sector and forcing capitulation (e.g., BitDeer selling holdings).
  • Despite short-term liquidity drains and ETF outflows, the long-term thesis remains intact due to reckless government spending, fiat debasement, and the nascent stage of institutional adoption (wirehouses like Merrill Lynch just coming online).
  • A "floor" is identified between $50k-$60k, where institutional allocators are aggressively accumulating, viewing the dip as a second chance to enter before Bitcoin potentially targets $1M+ over the next decade.
Trade Ideas
"We think there's a floor in between the 50 and 60 k range where investors will likely begin to really accelerate their... accumulation." + "Merrill Lynch started approving access to Bitcoin ETFs earlier this year." Institutional investors (wirehouses, family offices) missed the initial run-up and have been sitting on the sidelines. The current drawdown provides the specific entry point they require to deploy capital, creating a structural price floor driven by new, massive distribution channels that didn't exist in previous cycles. Long-term accumulation in the $50k-$60k zone. Continued liquidity drain from the crypto ecosystem or regulatory reversals.
"The average all in cost of mining Bitcoin is around $80,000. We're well below that right now... We've seen BitDeer Technologies sell all of its Bitcoin holdings." When the spot price is below the cost of production ($65k price vs $80k cost), miners burn cash reserves. This forces "less well capitalized miners" to sell treasury assets (capitulation) and eventually leads to industry consolidation where cash-rich miners acquire distressed competitors. Expect high volatility and bankruptcies in the sector. Avoid miners with weak balance sheets; watch for M&A opportunities among the "cash rich" leaders. Prolonged period of price below production cost could threaten even well-capitalized players.
"Other Bitcoin miners have strategically repositioned some of their data centers and assets to support the growth in AI, and so they're a little bit more insulated from the drawdown in Bitcoin price." Miners that diversify into High-Performance Computing (HPC) and AI data centers decouple their revenue from the volatile price of Bitcoin and the halving economics. These hybrid miners offer a defensive play within the crypto ecosystem. Prefer miners pivoting to AI infrastructure over pure-play miners during price drawdowns. Execution risk in pivoting business models from SHA-256 mining to AI compute hosting.
Up Next

This Bloomberg Markets video, published February 24, 2026, features Matt Rasmussen discussing BTC, BTDR, WGMI, BOTZ. 3 trade ideas extracted by AI with direction and confidence scoring.

Speakers: Matt Rasmussen  · Tickers: BTC, BTDR, WGMI, BOTZ