Bitcoin: Buy the Dip?

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In the cryptocurrency market, 2025 was supposed to be the year of Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC). But Bitcoin recently dipped below the all-important $100,000 price level, marking the first time this has happened during the Trump presidency.

Investors new to crypto are understandably concerned. However, for longtime crypto investors, this is nothing new. They know exactly what to do anytime Bitcoin suddenly declines in value. You buy the dip.

Bitcoin below $100,000

So, why did Bitcoin drop below the $100,000 mark? Some think it has to do with the launch of DeepSeek, the new Chinese AI competitor to ChatGPT. According to this narrative, investors now need to revalue all risky tech assets -- and that includes Bitcoin. That's why we're seeing an across-the-board decline both in tech stocks and cryptos.

However, Bitcoin also fell to the $90,000 mark just two weeks earlier. The decline was attributed to macroeconomic weakness in the U.S. economy. There's an old saying: "Anytime the Fed sneezes, the market catches a cold." The new saying might well be, "Anytime the Fed sneezes, Bitcoin catches a cold." It's just an unfortunate reality -- the more that Bitcoin goes mainstream, the more susceptible it is to the macroeconomic factors that impact traditional financial assets.

And don't forget about Bitcoin's weakness immediately after the inauguration. The popular explanation was that investors didn't think the Trump team was doing enough to support Bitcoin and crypto. On Day 1 of the Trump presidency, investors were expecting a raft of new policy changes and initiatives related to Bitcoin. What they got, however, was a Trump meme coin launch.

So, you can see where I'm going with this. Nobody really knows why Bitcoin is falling or how much further it might fall. If you talk to bearish investors, they're convinced that Bitcoin might fall all the way to $75,000 before it recovers. As might be imagined, this lack of clarity over Bitcoin's near-term trajectory is causing a lot of people to lose their faith in crypto.

Bitcoin's future upside potential

But now is no time to panic. The long-term narrative around Bitcoin is not going away. The world's most popular cryptocurrency clearly has the support of the Trump White House. It has the growing support of billionaire hedge fund managers, who increasingly view Bitcoin as "digital gold" and a hedge against economic uncertainty. And Bitcoin now has the support of top investment firms on Wall Street, which are busy launching new investment products such as new ETFs.