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Cathie Wood calls Bitcoin the ‘insurance policy’ AI stocks cannot replace

ByHannah CollymoreHannah Collymore
3 mins read
Cathie Wood calls Bitcoin the 'insurance policy' AI stocks cannot replace
  • AI has dominated capital markets, drawing investment away from crypto, with Bitcoin ETFs seeing sustained outflows.
  • Institutional investors, including BlackRock and Bitwise, believe rising government debt and inflation concerns could renew demand for Bitcoin.
  • Wood maintains that while AI creates wealth, Bitcoin’s long-term value lies in its role as a non-sovereign store of value during periods of economic uncertainty.

 

ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood has stated that Bitcoin stands apart from the artificial intelligence trade because it offers protection against sovereign currency risk, something no tech stock can offer.

“Capital outflows from less stable countries around the world will light another fire under bitcoin and other digital assets,” Wood wrote on X on June 27.

She acknowledged that AI “has launched a technology revolution, deservedly sucking a lot of oxygen out of the investment world,” but added that it “cannot serve as the insurance policy” that Bitcoin provides.

How much hold does AI have in capital markets?

Wood is not the only voice drawing a line between the two asset classes. BlackRock’s head of digital assets, Robbie Mitchnick, said in a June 22 interview that Bitcoin’s weak performance since October 2025 is not in isolation, as everything outside AI trade has also suffered. According to Mitchnick, it is not a crypto-specific problem.

“It’s been a tough stretch for Bitcoin since last October for all of crypto, and that’s consistent in many ways with just about everything that is not AI-centric,” Mitchnick said in an interview. He described the AI boom as “certainly sucking a lot of the oxygen out of the room.”

Bitwise chief investment officer Matt Hougan recently called crypto a “contrarian bet” now that institutional capital has shifted toward AI stocks, robotics firms, and SpaceX. “Who needs crypto when the Nasdaq-100 is up 43% year-over-year?” he wrote.

Bitcoin trades around $60,000 as of June 27, which is a decline of over 50% from the all-time high of above $125,000 reached last October.

U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded more than 45 consecutive days of outflows totaling $7.8 billion, according to Cryptopolitan’s earlier reporting.

While these bleak numbers are coming out, the largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, AI-linked semiconductor stocks from Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom, and Marvell have all outperformed Bitcoin on a year-to-date basis.

Are crypto miners ditching crypto for AI?

The capital flight extends beyond trading desks, as miners have also been pivoting to AI infrastructure services in droves. 

Bitcoin’s network hashrate fell from a peak of 1.151 zetahashes per second in October 2025 to roughly 0.888 zetahashes per second.

A report from late March found that listed miners could derive as much as 70% of their revenue from AI infrastructure by the end of 2026, up from about 30% at the start of the year.

In a mid-year update, Fidelity Digital Assets described the dynamic as “structural retooling,” noting that miners appear to be redirecting power and infrastructure toward higher-margin AI data center workloads. 

The 30-day average hashrate and mining difficulty both dropped roughly 8% to 9% from earlier highs before partially recovering.

The Bitcoin difficulty adjustment that occurred on June 14 was the 11th largest downward adjustment in the network’s history, according to Galaxy Research.

Is a Bitcoin bull run ahead or a pipe dream?

Despite the pressure, several institutional voices say that the pendulum of investments will swing back to crypto.

Mitchnick identified rising U.S. government debt and deficits as “ultimately the most important fundamental driver ahead” for Bitcoin, predicting the issue could resurface around the 2026 midterm elections.

BlackRock itself recommended a 1% to 2% Bitcoin portfolio allocation on June 23, calling the asset a “complementary diversifier.”

For Hougan at Bitwise, the bear market may be closer to its end than its beginning. Hougan wrote, “When crypto stops being a momentum trade, fundamentals start to matter, and this rotation is proof it’s already underway.”

In her post, Wood stated that AI creates wealth, but it cannot serve as an insurance policy to protect it.

If capital flight from weaker currencies goes up, or if U.S. fiscal policy triggers inflation fears, Bitcoin’s value proposition as a non-sovereign store of value becomes harder for allocators to ignore, regardless of how many AI chips Nvidia sells.

How this plays out in the future remains to be seen.

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FAQs

Why has Bitcoin underperformed in 2026?

BlackRock's Robbie Mitchnick attributed the decline to the AI investment boom pulling capital away from Bitcoin, gold, and other non-AI assets, a trend he said has persisted since October 2025. Bitcoin has fallen roughly 50% from its all-time high above $125,000.

What is Cathie Wood's argument for Bitcoin over AI?

Wood argued that capital outflows from countries with unstable currencies will drive demand for Bitcoin and digital assets, and that AI "cannot serve as the insurance policy" that Bitcoin offers against sovereign risk.

Are Bitcoin miners leaving the network for AI?

According to a CoinShares report, listed Bitcoin miners could earn as much as 70% of their revenue from AI infrastructure by the end of 2026, up from about 30% earlier in the year. Bitcoin's network hashrate has fallen roughly 23% from its October 2025 peak.

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Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Hannah Collymore

Hannah Collymore

Hannah is a writer and editor with nearly a decade of blog writing and event reporting experience in the crypto space. At Cryptopolitan, Hannah contributes to the news page, reporting and analyzing the latest developments in DeFi, RWA, crypto regulation, AI and frontier tech industries. She graduated from Arcadia university with a degree in Business Administration.

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