‘Bad Money’: Cramer Says Capital Is Leaving Bitcoin and Gold for Big Tech Winners

TL;DR:

  • Jim Cramer called Bitcoin and gold “bad money,” arguing capital is being liquidated toward high-growth technology stocks such as Nvidia and Apple.
  • His comments follow criticism of Michael Saylor and Strategy after the company sold 32 BTC.
  • The broader argument is that AI equities are absorbing liquidity, leaving Bitcoin without the inflows needed to sustain a bull run while Big Tech dominates current capital allocation in this market cycle now.

Jim Cramer has sharpened his latest turn against Bitcoin by calling both Bitcoin and gold “bad money” in a market where capital is moving toward high-growth technology stocks such as Nvidia and Apple. The remark lands awkwardly because it treats two classic alternative assets, digital scarcity and physical scarcity, as funding sources for the same trade: artificial intelligence-linked equity momentum. The uncomfortable message is that defensive narratives are losing to Big Tech, at least while investors chase the companies absorbing liquidity and market attention.

The comment follows Cramer’s recent criticism of Strategy co-founder Michael Saylor, whom he accused of “murdering Bitcoin” after the company sold 32 BTC. Earlier in June 2026, Cramer said investors may need to reconsider their pro-bitcoin stance toward Strategy, even while acknowledging that the firm had served as a key trampoline for Bitcoin’s price for years. Some market observers have described MicroStrategy’s influence as manipulation, but Cramer called that charge too strong. His concern is dependency rather than conspiracy, because Bitcoin’s price history has become closely associated with one corporate buyer’s accumulation story.

AI stocks pull liquidity away from alternative assets

This is not Cramer’s first public retreat from Bitcoin enthusiasm. In February 2026, he questioned the asset’s practical utility, asking what Bitcoin was actually leveraged to and dismissing the idea that it worked as an effective hedge against geopolitical conflict. That skepticism contrasts with his own earlier history: he has said he owned and backed crypto from very early times, and in a 2021 appearance on The Pomp Podcast said he invested $500,000 into Bitcoin after following Anthony Pompliano’s advice. The reversal is striking because it comes from a former buyer, not from a lifelong crypto critic.

The broader market explanation is liquidity. AI equities have become the dominant capital magnet, with Nvidia and other technology names outperforming crypto in allocation terms. BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes recently framed the pressure more bluntly, saying AI “sucked up all created dollars,” leaving Bitcoin without the inflows needed to sustain a bull run. The hard question is whether Bitcoin is weak or merely starved, because the argument does not require investors to abandon crypto forever. It only says that, for now, the most aggressive capital is chasing Big Tech winners instead. That rotation, even if temporary, still changes the tone of Bitcoin’s current market drawdown.

read the full story

Range Raises $8.3M as Institutions Push for Pre-Execution Stablecoin Risk Controls

Range, a Zug, Switzerland-based financial infrastructure company, closed an oversubscribed $8.3…

New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh Ditches Rate Signals, Bitcoin Slides as Nasdaq Bounces 1.5%

Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh used his debut press conference on June 17 to strip away…

Strategy's STRC Falls to Record Low, Squeezing a Bitcoin Funding Channel

The Stretch preferred fell to about $85 on Thursday, roughly 15% below the $100 it is engineered to…

Why Bitcoin Titan Strategy's STRC Is Falling to New Lows

Strategy’s flagship preferred stock is facing pressure, but analysts say that's not yet an…

Bitcoin (BTC) Crashes Below $63K

TL;DR Bitcoin slipped below $63,000 after stronger U.S. jobless-claims data reinforced the Fed’s…

Bitcoin Slides to $62k as Traders Dump Risk, Wiping out Iran Peace Rally Gains

Bitcoin tumbled 5% to $62,000, hitting an intraday low of $62,236 and marking a 7.5% drop since June…

CME Group Challenges CFTC in Court Over Kalshi’s Bitcoin Perpetual Futures

CME Group is ready to fight. Not in a trading pit — in a courtroom. Outgoing CME CEO Terrence…

Fed Joins 4 Agencies to Demand ID Programs From Payment Stablecoin Operators

The U.S. Federal Reserve and four partner agencies moved Thursday to impose bank-grade customer…

SkyBridge’s Anthony Scaramucci Predicts Another Bitcoin Rally by Late 2026

TL;DR Anthony Scaramucci predicts Bitcoin could rally again in late 2026 or early 2027, citing…

Bitcoin, Ethereum Traders Grow Even More Bearish as Prices Fall After Fed Decision

Prediction market traders don't see Bitcoin or Ethereum making their next big moves to higher price…

U.S. agencies seek stablecoin customer-ID rules akin to banks in new GENIUS Act rule

The Federal Reserve, Treasury and other regulators have issued a proposed rule that would set…

Bitcoin miners need billions to fund AI ambitions, led by IREN’s $21B gap

IREN leads public Bitcoin miners with a projected $21.1 billion AI infrastructure funding gap,…

Bitcoin Builds a Floor Near $60,000, but On-Chain Data Says the Bear Isn’t Over

Bitcoin builds a floor near $60K as spot bids strengthen, yet on-chain data shows the bear market…

Bitcoin tumbles toward $63K as strong jobs report reinforces hawkish Fed

Bitcoin has fallen nearly 3% toward $63,000 after stronger-than-expected U.S. labor market data…

Everyday Savers Bet Big on Bitcoin Giant Strategy's STRC—Now It's Falling

Everyday investors that own Strategy’s STRC have been drawn to double-digit yields, but the…

Jerome Powell Supports Fed's New Stablecoin Policies—But Chair Kevin Warsh Abstains

The proposed rulemaking establishes how U.S. crypto companies will have to screen stablecoin…

BlackRock Beats Strategy and Binance as Third-Largest Bitcoin Holder

BlackRock surprisingly takes the position as the third largest Bitcoin-holding entity, outperforming…