Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone has cautioned that bitcoin's recent slide may indicate broader financial stress and a potential U.S. recession. He predicts the cryptocurrency could drop to $10,000 as the post-2008 'buy the dip' era ends amid high stock valuations and low volatility. Market analyst Jason Fernandes views such a steep decline as a low-probability event requiring a severe credit shock.
Mike McGlone, a macro strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, stated on Monday that collapsing cryptocurrency prices signal mounting financial stress, with bitcoin potentially reverting toward $10,000. This downturn, he argued, could foreshadow the next U.S. recession. In a post on X, McGlone wrote, “Healthy Correction is what we should hear soon from stock market analysts (who risk unemployment if not onboard), following collapsing cryptos. The buy the dips mantra since 2008 may be over.”
McGlone linked bitcoin's weakness to several indicators: U.S. stock market capitalization relative to gross domestic product (GDP) at its highest level in roughly a century, 180-day volatility in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 at its lowest in about eight years, and rising gold and silver prices grabbing alpha at a pace not seen in half a century. He described the crypto bubble as imploding, with 'Trump euphoria' peaked, potentially leading to contagion into equities. Bitcoin, which climbed to $70,841 by 07:00 UTC on February 15 from $65,395 late on February 12, was hovering around $68,800 by mid-morning on February 16. The broader crypto market was down, with 85 of the top 100 tokens posting losses, including monero and zcash down 10% and 8% over the past 24 hours.
McGlone shared a chart scaling bitcoin by dividing by 10, comparing it to the S&P 500, both below 7,000 as of February 13. He identified 5,600 on the S&P 500—equivalent to about $56,000 for bitcoin—as an initial reversion level, with $10,000 possible if U.S. stocks peak.
Jason Fernandes, co-founder of AdLunam, countered that a drop to $10,000 assumes markets resolve extremes through collapse, calling it false equivalence. “Markets can also resolve excess through time, rotation, or inflation erosion. A macro slowdown could mean consolidation or a $40,000 to $50,000 reset, not a systemic unwind to $10,000,” Fernandes told CoinDesk. He added that such a move would require a systemic event like sharp liquidity contraction and recession, deeming it a low-probability tail risk absent a credit shock.
Bitcoin has already fallen nearly 30% in the past month, wiping out $2 trillion in crypto market value. Investors pulled $678 million from bitcoin exchange-traded funds in February, extending a $6 billion selloff since November. Technology stocks, which bitcoin often follows, face pressure from artificial intelligence disruption fears, with BlackRock's tech ETF down 23% year-to-date and Microsoft losing $357 billion on February 1.