Saylor Points to AI Spending as the Culprit @Saylor is pushing back against bearish narratives surrounding $BTC, arguing that the current price weakness has nothing to do with the underlying
Saylor Points to AI Spending as the Culprit
@Saylor is pushing back against bearish narratives surrounding $BTC, arguing that the current price weakness has nothing to do with the underlying asset. Capital markets have deployed approximately $400 billion into the artificial intelligence sector over the last six months, he noted, triggering a broad liquidity rotation away from digital assets. "This is a capital rotation, not a Bitcoin impairment," Saylor said.
The assessment is supported by independent market analysis. According to CoinDesk, Bitcoin's recent weakness reflects a broader rotation into AI, IPOs, and other momentum trades rather than any structural problem with the asset itself. Charles Schwab director of digital currencies research Jim Ferraioli echoed the point, arguing that capital that once chased speculative gains in crypto is increasingly flowing to other hot narratives such as gold, AI-related stocks, and IPOs.
ETF Outflows Add to the Pressure
The numbers back up the rotation thesis. US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded nine straight trading days of net outflows through late May 2026, the longest such streak since the funds launched in January 2024, with roughly $2.8 billion leaving the complex over that run.May 2026 saw about $2.43 billion in net outflows, the largest monthly withdrawal of the year. That followed what had been a strong April, which pulled in $1.97 billion in net inflows, making the reversal particularly sharp.
BlackRock's IBIT bore the brunt of the selling. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust accounted for about $2.04 billion of total outflows, including a single-day exit of $527.84 million on May 28 that came within about half a million dollars of its all-time record.
Despite the outflows, Saylor's long-term conviction remains unchanged. Institutional adoption is improving, regulatory clarity is advancing, and major financial firms continue building crypto products. Yet none of those developments guarantees higher prices if investor attention is focused elsewhere. For now, the debate is less about Bitcoin's fundamentals and more about where capital wants to go next.
Sources:CoinDesk: Bitcoin isn't crashing because of Saylor, it's losing the momentum tradeCrypto.news: Why Bitcoin ETFs are seeing record outflowsCoinDesk: Bitcoin ETFs suffer record 9-day outflow streak as $2.8 billion exits funds