The Higher Bitcoin Goes, The Less Institutions Want It? Coinbase Executive Weighs InInstitutions that bought Bitcoin at $100,000 and $125,000 are showing even greater interest now that prices have dropped to around $60,000, according to Coinbase Head of Institutional Strategy John D’Agostino.
He made the remarks in a recent interview with CNBC, as Bitcoin trades around $63,500 after a sharp pullback last week.
No Sign Of Panic Selling Among Big Players
D’Agostino said he is unaware of any major institutional investor facing dangerous levels of leverage or imminent liquidation risk. Rather than cutting exposure, many large holders are reportedly looking to raise additional capital and expand their Bitcoin positions.
Family offices, sovereign wealth funds, and government investment entities in the Middle East are among those viewing the recent correction as a chance to buy at lower prices, D’Agostino said.
He noted that institutions have spent years studying Bitcoin and tend to grow more interested as prices fall, not less.

The backdrop to all this is a Bitcoin market that turned sharply lower over the past week. The asset dropped to around $59,500 after trading above $70,000 just days earlier, before recovering above $63,000.
ETF Exposure Holds Despite The Drop
Despite the steep decline, investors have kept more than $750 billion in exposure through spot Bitcoin ETFs, according to D’Agostino. Retail participation has dipped only slightly.
“I think both retail and institutional are signaling this is a long-term asset you want to hold,” he said during the interview.

CNBC host Joe Kernen raised several factors that may have contributed to the pullback — among them a risk-off environment, capital rotation into other assets, elevated interest rates, and slower-than-expected progress on regulatory clarity.
D’Agostino acknowledged these concerns are widely cited by market participants, but argued that price swings are normal for an asset class that behaves like a commodity.
Geopolitical Uncertainty Adds To The Pressure
He also addressed geopolitical headwinds, including tensions involving Iran and uncertainty surrounding the Strait of Hormuz, saying Bitcoin’s long-term investment case remains intact despite those pressures.
The improved market infrastructure and evolving regulatory framework, he added, make the current environment stronger than it was during previous downturns.
Bitcoin was trading at $63,841 at the time of publication, up 3.4% over the prior 24 hours, based on data from Coingecko.
Featured image from Silas Stein/picture alliance via Getty Images, chart from TradingView
read the full story
Institutions that bought Bitcoin at $100,000 and $125,000 are showing even greater interest now that prices have dropped to around $60,000, according to Coinbase Head of Institutional Strategy John D’Agostino.
He made the remarks in a recent interview with CNBC, as Bitcoin trades around $63,500 after a sharp pullback last week.
No Sign Of Panic Selling Among Big Players
D’Agostino said he is unaware of any major institutional investor facing dangerous levels of leverage or imminent liquidation risk. Rather than cutting exposure, many large holders are reportedly looking to raise additional capital and expand their Bitcoin positions.
Family offices, sovereign wealth funds, and government investment entities in the Middle East are among those viewing the recent correction as a chance to buy at lower prices, D’Agostino said.
He noted that institutions have spent years studying Bitcoin and tend to grow more interested as prices fall, not less.

The backdrop to all this is a Bitcoin market that turned sharply lower over the past week. The asset dropped to around $59,500 after trading above $70,000 just days earlier, before recovering above $63,000.
ETF Exposure Holds Despite The Drop
Despite the steep decline, investors have kept more than $750 billion in exposure through spot Bitcoin ETFs, according to D’Agostino. Retail participation has dipped only slightly.
“I think both retail and institutional are signaling this is a long-term asset you want to hold,” he said during the interview.
CNBC host Joe Kernen raised several factors that may have contributed to the pullback — among them a risk-off environment, capital rotation into other assets, elevated interest rates, and slower-than-expected progress on regulatory clarity.
D’Agostino acknowledged these concerns are widely cited by market participants, but argued that price swings are normal for an asset class that behaves like a commodity.
Geopolitical Uncertainty Adds To The Pressure
He also addressed geopolitical headwinds, including tensions involving Iran and uncertainty surrounding the Strait of Hormuz, saying Bitcoin’s long-term investment case remains intact despite those pressures.
The improved market infrastructure and evolving regulatory framework, he added, make the current environment stronger than it was during previous downturns.
Bitcoin was trading at $63,841 at the time of publication, up 3.4% over the prior 24 hours, based on data from Coingecko.
Featured image from Silas Stein/picture alliance via Getty Images, chart from TradingView
read the full storyTrump’s Iran Deal Sends Stocks to Records, Then the Fed Speaks and Bitcoin Slides
Oil fell 33% on the Iran deal, the Dow hit a record, and Bitcoin touched $67K. Then the Fed wiped…
Elon Musk Just Surpassed Bitcoin: His Net Worth Reaches $1.4 Trillion
Elon Musk has officially become bigger than Bitcoin. His personal net worth reached an unprecedented…
VanEck Highlights $50 Billion Gap for Bitcoin Miners Eyeing AI Ventures
Bitcoin miners are facing a substantial cash flow problem. A very big problem. VanEck has released…
Forget the price charts. Here's how bitcoin and S&P 500 look like when adjusted for the money printer
Valuations shaped by M2 money supply growth paint reveal concerning trends for risk assets.
Strategy’s STRC falls to $91 as investors flinch at latest BTC buying
“It appears traders are seeing the latest BTC acquisition as an unsustainable path for STRC,”…
Bitcoin Seller Exhaustion? On-chain Data Signals Transition Toward Late-Stage Capitulation
Although current loss realization levels are enough to confirm deep bear conditions, they have not…
Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee Push
Sui stablecoin transfer activity surged after a gasless transfer push, though analysts should treat…
Live markets: A bitcoin bottom signal flashed as holders absorbed 125,000 BTC in June
Bitcoin's Sharpe ratio hit a level that has marked every cycle low since 2015, but in each case it…
Uniswap jumps 22% and altcoins rip while bitcoin stalls before the Fed
UNI surged after Standard Chartered set a $100 long-term target, and HYPE and solana led a broad…
Satoshi’s 1.1 Million Bitcoin Sit Frozen Since 2010, Worth $73 Billion
Nobody’s touched them. Not once. Satoshi Nakamoto’s estimated 1.1 million bitcoin —…
Gate Lists RLUSD With BTC, ETH, XRP and USDT Pairs as Rewards Go Live
Gate added RLUSD trading pairs with XRP, BTC, ETH, and USDT, extending exchange access for…
Bitcoin’s Killer Use Case: Michael Saylor Explains How BTC Could Transform Global Finance
Michael Saylor says bitcoin’s “killer use case” is far bigger than payments, arguing that BTC…
Bitcoin Jumps 5% as Global Regulators Push New Crypto Oversight Rules
Bitcoin climbed 5% on Thursday. Not a slow grind — a real jump, the kind that gets traders talking…
Strategy’s Bitcoin-Backed Preferred Stock Slides as Strive SATA Gains Ground
Strategy’s bitcoin-backed preferred stock is in trouble. It’s trading well below par…
Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?
Ethereum outperformed Bitcoin as BitMine added more ETH and traders rushed to reposition following…
Wintermute Says Bitcoin Rally Faces Another Trap Unless ETF Demand Returns
TL;DR: The consumer inflation in the United States for the month of May reached 4.2% year-on-year,…
Bitcoin’s Next Phase Is Bigger Than Holding BTC: Saylor Outlines 5-Layer Stack
Michael Saylor says bitcoin’s evolution could extend far beyond corporate treasury strategies,…
Bitcoin slips to $65K after Israel’s action clouds U.S.-Iran peace hopes
Bitcoin has fallen back toward $65,000 after renewed tensions involving Israel and Lebanon tempered…