Bitcoin
Stablecoins and Bitcoin – The road to $140K in Q1 depends on…
Stablecoin inflows are rising, but still far from last year’s highs. Are investors playing it safe?
- Stablecoin supply surged by 17% in Q4, with more investors jumping into Bitcoin despite the high risk
- BTC soared by over 50% as a result – Is another rally on the charts?
Stablecoin supply and Bitcoin’s price are tightly linked – When stablecoins flow, Bitcoin often follows. Take the ‘Trump Pump’ in Q4 last year, for instance – Stablecoin supply soared by 16.9%, hitting $188.82 billion, and Bitcoin [BTC] climbed from $67.8k to $106.1k. It was a textbook case of liquidity driving momentum.
But now, the tides are turning. Liquidity inflows are slowing, signaling that investors are starting to hesitate. With another Trump Pump just days away, is the ‘high-risk, high-reward’ allure of crypto starting to lose its appeal?
Market shifts towards caution
Bitcoin’s impressive recovery from $91k to $97k (At the time of writing) – a 6.6% jump in just a week – shows that traders are bracing for the next big rally. And, it’s no coincidence that Tether USD (ERC20) stablecoins saw $311.5 million in inflows during the same period.
This backs up AMBCrypto’s theory – When liquidity rises, investors aren’t hesitating. They’re doubling down, loading up their portfolios.
However, this is just the beginning. It’s still nothing compared to last year’s Election Day, when a massive $2.15 billion in stablecoins flooded the market, marking the highest influx of the year.
The result? BTC surged by 8.24% in one day, breaking through $70k for the first time in eight months.And, it didn’t stop there. In the two months following the Trump pump, $27.35 billion in stablecoins flowed across exchanges, fueling BTC’s 56.5% surge to $106.5k. Q4 truly shattered stablecoin’s ‘safe haven’ image.
Since then though, things have changed. Two clashes with the Fed, high inflation, and rising selling pressure have taken their toll. Open Interest (OI) has dropped from $68 billion to $61 billion, and the stablecoin market cap has only seen a modest +0.56% change in the last 30 days.
And yet, there’s a silver lining. While liquidity is more restricted, it could lead to greater market stability. Combined with the drop in Open Interest (OI), this suggested investors are becoming more cautious, speculating less on BTC’s future. With high stakes at play, it is a sign that the market is maturing.
So, will Bitcoin outshine stablecoins?
Mathematically, a 56.5% surge like the Trump pump could push Bitcoin past $140k by Q1, with $90k acting as a solid support level. Even more promising, the past three days have seen stablecoin net flows turn positive, sparking a rally that’s bringing the market back into the green.
But let’s not get ahead of ourselves – A 50% rally might still be overly ambitious. With 88% of Bitcoin’s supply in retail hands, their next moves could be the key to pushing BTC closer to its Q1 target. So, the real game-changer? A stablecoin influx crossing the billion mark, a far cry from the current 130 million.
Read Bitcoin’s [BTC] Price Prediction 2025-26
A $100k breakthrough in the short term seems likely, but whether it can hold the levels remains in question. So, eyes on the stablecoin chart are crucial. Even a slight panic could turn the market red in no time.