Out of Oxygen, Into Asymmetry: Bitcoin Screens Cheap as the Safe-Haven Bid Unwinds

Bitwise Weekly Crypto Market Compass – Week 25, 2026
Out of Oxygen, Into Asymmetry: Bitcoin Screens Cheap as the Safe-Haven Bid Unwinds | Bitwise

This report is for professional investors and information purposes only. Persons without professional investment experience should not rely on it. Not investment advice or a personal recommendation. Cryptoassets are high risk and volatile and you may lose all capital invested. See full risk information at the end of this document.

  • Performance: Cross-asset performance staged a sharp reversal, with cryptoassets outperforming as a looming US-Iran peace deal drained geopolitical risk out of the system. Bitcoin based around $61k mid-week before rallying close to 3% to roughly $65k in early Monday trading, while equities recovered most of their recent losses and gold - the mirror image - slipped towards $4,000/oz, heading for a second consecutive weekly decline.
  • Cryptoasset Sentiment Index: Our Cryptoasset Sentiment Index has recovered from last week's deeply bearish readings - the most pessimistic since February - and is now signalling slightly bullish sentiment as of this morning. The earlier sentiment washout made a short-term reversal likely, although with the broader backdrop still fragile we would treat the current bounce as a relief rally rather than a confirmed trend change.
  • Chart-of-the-Week: On the Mayer Multiple (price relative to the 200-day moving average), Bitcoin has fallen back below 1.0 while Nvidia continues to trade at a sizeable premium to its own 200-day average. Measured against their respective long-term trends, Bitcoin screens as deep value precisely while semiconductor and AI equities remain extended, leaving the relative-value gap between Bitcoin and the most crowded corner of the equity market among the widest on this metric.

Chart of the Week

Bitcoin is relatively cheap compared to Nvidia Bitoin vs Nvidia NVDA Mayer Multiple
Source: Bloomberg, Bitwise Europe

Performance

Cross-asset performance staged a sharp reversal and cryptoassets outperformed over the past week.

After the violent risk-off episode that culminated in the prior Monday's circuit-breaker on the KOSPI, sentiment turned decisively as the prospect of a US–Iran peace deal took hold.

Equities tracked towards a positive week on news that a deal might be near, one that would lift oil sanctions on Iran and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with the S&P 500 recovering most of its recent losses.

Bitcoin followed the same script: having based around $61k mid-week, it climbed to its highest level in nearly two weeks, rising close to 3% in early Monday morning trading to roughly $65,400. All of this happened after we had observed the most bearish sentiment readings since February last week which made a short-term reversal likely.

Gold, by contrast, was the mirror image, slipping towards the $4,000/oz area and heading for a second consecutive weekly decline, down close to 10% over the past month on expectations of higher-for-longer rates.

The message from these performances is clear. As geopolitical risk drained out of the system, the classic safe-haven was sold while risk assets, equities and Bitcoin alike, were bought.

The AI and semiconductor complex remains the epicentre of this volatility. The recent drawdown was triggered precisely here: Broadcom beat its Q2 estimates and posted AI-chip revenue growth of 143%, yet the stock fell more than 12% in a single session, a striking disconnect between fundamentals and price action that speaks to how richly the sector is priced.

We would flag the risk of a "mid-cycle slowdown" in AI, a thesis recently articulated by Jordi Visser. AI demand is now so large that it may begin to outstrip supply, with bottlenecks and shortages potentially slowing the earnings of these companies, not because demand is absent but because it is too big. In Visser's framing, the new regime is one of "bubbles, parabolas, and speed crashes," with sharp and transient corrections rather than a multi-year bear market.

The IPO pipeline reinforces the point. SpaceX came to market on Friday, and Anthropic filed confidentially earlier this month, with OpenAI expected to follow in the coming weeks. Companies tend to list when valuations and risk appetite are richest, so this rush of marquee names is, in our view, a classic marker of, at least, short-term exuberance.

Together these three deals could demand north of $200bn from public markets, against a total US IPO market of roughly $45bn in all of 2025. A capital call of that magnitude has the potential to temporarily ‘suck the oxygen', that is, the liquidity, out of the room, weighing on Bitcoin and other risk assets even if only for a brief period.

This brings us to relative value. On the Mayer Multiple, the ratio of price to the 200-day moving average, where a reading below 1.0 has historically marked an accumulation zone and values above 2.4 signalled bubble territory, Bitcoin has fallen back below 1.0, having sat just under its long-term trend at around 0.94 in late May before this latest leg lower.

Applying the same trend-deviation lens to Nvidia tells the opposite story: the poster child of the AI trade continues to trade at a sizeable premium to its own 200-day average.

In other words, measured against its own long-term trend, Bitcoin now screens as deep value precisely while semiconductor and AI equities remain extended (Chart-of-the-week).

On this metric, the gap between Bitcoin's valuation and that of the most crowded corner of the equity market is among the widest in its history.

The proximate catalyst for this morning's risk-on tone is the apparent breakthrough in US–Iran negotiations. Per the latest terms circulating via The Kobeissi Letter, the framework would extend the US-Iran ceasefire for 60 days, open a 60-day negotiation period on Iran's nuclear programme, remove the US naval blockade and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, commit the US to discussing sanctions relief and the release of frozen Iranian funds, and deliver a permanent end to fighting on all fronts including Lebanon, with a final agreement to be signed on 19 June in Switzerland.

As a result, WTI crude fell roughly 3% to around $85 per barrel on reduced supply risk, and cryptoassets rallied, with Ether up as much as 3.7% to around $1,731 and smaller tokens such as Solana and XRP posting larger gains. We would caution, however, that sentiment remains fragile beneath the surface. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index sits at 18, in "Extreme Fear," and Bitcoin remains in a technical downtrend below its key moving averages and investor cost bases. This is, for now, still a relief rally within a downtrend.

Looking ahead, the key catalyst this week is Wednesday's FOMC decision, notably the first meeting chaired by Kevin Warsh, with the policy rate at 3.50%–3.75%.

A hold is all but fully priced, with prediction markets putting the odds at roughly 99%, and Fed Funds futures now discount essentially no change for the remainder of the year.

The market has repriced sharply in a hawkish direction in recent weeks, pricing out the cuts it had assumed and at times pushing hike odds above 50% for later in 2026, as April CPI ran at 3.8% year-on-year, the hottest reading in nearly three years.

The risk, in our view, is one of complacency. With the rate decision itself a near-certainty, the action will be in the guidance, the dot plot, and the press conference. Given Warsh's "regime change" rhetoric on inflation discipline, the asymmetry skews towards a hawkish surprise, and any such surprise would force a further repricing of the rate path that has been the principal headwind for both Bitcoin and high-valuation equities.

Cross Asset Performance (Week-to-Date) Cross Asset Week to Date Performance
Source: Bloomberg, Coinmarketcap; performances in USD exept Bund Future
Top 10 Cryptoasset Performance (Week-to-Date) Crypto Top 10 Week to Date Performance
Source: Coinmarketcap

In general, among the top 10 crypto assets Hyperliquid, Solana, and ZCash were the relative outperformers. Ethereum slightly underperformed bitcoin last week.

Sentiment

Our in-house “Cryptoasset Sentiment Index” has recovered into neutral territory following a negative spike in the middle of last week.

At the moment, 10 out of 15 indicators remain above their short-term trend.

Notably, Bitcoin's one-month implied volatility, funding rate and exchange inflows all turned positive, reversing last week's negative readings, suggesting that investor speculation, alongside appetite for leverage and derivatives, has picked up once again. However, exchange inflows often tend to mean investors may be ready to take profits as investors sell into a short-term bounce.

The Crypto Fear & Greed Index has increased significantly last week from its lows not seen since beginning of April. Although as of this morning, still remains in the “extreme fear”.

Performance dispersion slightly declined last week as altcoins remain highly correlated to Bitcoin. Although note that the AI subsector bucks this trend, largely driven by Bittensor, Venice, Near and their peers, as decentralised training comes to the forefront of investors’ minds amidst the US Administration banning Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for US foreign nationals.

When dispersion decreased, it may indicate that the market appears to be driven by a less diverse set of narratives which, in our analysis, has historically been associated with periods of declining risk appetite in prior market cycles.

Altcoin outperformance vis-à-vis Bitcoin increased slightly to 25% of our tracked altcoins in the index. Ethereum underperformed bitcoin last week.

Sentiment in traditional financial markets as measured by our in-house measure of Cross Asset Risk Appetite (CARA) declined slightly from 0.58 to 0.57 over the past week, signalling that risk appetite is mostly unchanged in traditional markets.

CME Bitcoin Commercials Net Positioning shows that the difference between long and short CME Bitcoin futures contracts. The reading has fallen to record lows of around –14.14% of open interest, suggesting that investors are cautious in the short term, either hedging for, or nakedly positioned for, near-term downside. That said, any reversal could lead to upside volatility. All in all, Bitcoin and broader crypto sentiment, leverage and speculation improved supporting week-to-date outperformance relative to traditional asset classes. Yet, investors still anticipate short-term downside and are the most heavily positioned for it since records began. It is worth noting, however, that this could be considered a crowded trade and may prompt short-term upside volatility should anything reverse.

Fund Flows

Net outflows from global crypto ETPs declined last week with only around -33.9 mn USD across all types of cryptoassets, after -1,823.1 mn USD in net outflows the previous week.

Global Bitcoin ETPs continued to experience net outflows of –189.1 mn USD last week, of which –322.9 mn USD in net outflows were related to US spot Bitcoin ETFs.

The Bitwise Bitcoin ETF (BITB) in the US experienced net inflows of +6.2 mn USD last week.

In Europe, the Bitwise Physical Bitcoin ETP (BTCE) experienced net outflows equivalent to –0.3 mn USD, as the Bitwise Core Bitcoin ETP (BTC1) experienced net inflows of around +3.9 mn USD.

The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) posted net outflows of –87.9 mn USD whereas, the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) experienced sharp net outflows of around –355.1 mn USD last week.

Meanwhile, global Ethereum ETPs experienced +31 mn USD in net inflows last week, of which US spot Ethereum ETFs recorded net outflows of around –43.5 mn USD on aggregate.

The Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE) posted net outflows of –17.4 mn USD, whilst the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) saw net outflows of –7.2 mn USD.

The Bitwise Ethereum ETF (ETHW) in the US experienced net inflows of +3.0 mn USD last week.

In Europe, the Bitwise Physical Ethereum ETP (ZETH) recorded net inflows of +0.8 mn USD, whilst the Bitwise Ethereum Staking ETP (ET32) saw net inflows of +0.4 mn USD.

Altcoin ETPs ex Ethereum also saw net inflows of +12.8 mn USD last week.

Thematic & basket crypto ETPs posted net inflows of +111.3 mn USD on aggregate last week. The Bitwise MSCI Digital Assets Select 20 ETP (DA20) recorded minor net inflows of +0.3 mn USD last week.

To sum up, this week's crypto outflows were led by Bitcoin US ETFs (IBIT's -355.1 mn USD and GBTC's -87.9 mn USD). Yet Ethereum, Altcoins Ex-ETH, and basket and thematic products all saw net inflows, suggesting a degree of wider dispersion in crypto risk appetite, in line with improved sentiment.

On-Chain Data

Following last week's crash to $59k, Bitcoin has experienced a local relief rally, rising to $64k. Price has since begun to oscillate within this range as the market continues to digest the magnitude of the recent move.

We can quantify the scale of the move, and the degree of pent-up volatility discharged, by assessing the 7-day percentage change across short-end realised volatility tenors:

  • Realised Volatility 1-Week: 133.1% change, with 6.7% of trading days recording a larger increase
  • Realised Volatility 2-Week: 63.5% change, with 7.6% of trading days recording a larger increase
  • Realised Volatility 1-Month: 41.4% change, with 4.9% of trading days recording a larger increase

However, the percentage changes remain far more tempered across longer-duration tenors, suggesting that while local conditions point toward a period of sideways consolidation and recovery, the broader macro move may not yet be fully discharged.

On a broader basis, the downward move was not isolated to Bitcoin, with the majority of digital assets also experiencing stress as investors locked in sizeable losses. The median magnitude of loss realised per coin spent fell to –7%, –14%, and –18% across large-cap (≥$1bn), mid-cap ($100mn–$1bn), and small-cap (<$100mn) assets, respectively. Only 3.4%, 7%, and 6% of observations have recorded weaker spending dynamics, respectively.

Turning back to Bitcoin specifically, aggregate investor stress remains elevated, with the value of capital held at a loss estimated at approximately $851bn, equivalent to around 79% of all invested value. In addition, the recent move lower has pushed the percentage of circulating supply in profit down to 47.5%, with only 13% of trading days recording a lower reading. Together, these measures highlight the severity of investor balance-sheet stress from both a supply and dollar-denominated perspective.

Furthermore, the 30-day change in the percentage of supply held in profit has declined by 16.4%, with only 2.9% of trading days recording a more severe deterioration in profitability conditions. This observation is also visible across both Long- and Short-Term Holder cohorts (LTH and STH), representing mature and newer investors, respectively, with both groups seeing large portions of supply move into loss. This suggests the recent correction has affected a wide spectrum of investors.

However, the majority of Long-Term Holders have remained steadfast, with HODLing still the dominant behaviour across the cohort. While the newest LTHs, aged 6–12 months, continue to capitulate, coins are still maturing into the cohort at a faster rate than they are being spent. As a result, LTH supply has reached an all-time high of 14.9mn BTC, suggesting that maturation dynamics remain stronger than the cohort's rate of distribution.

The Realised Price, representing the market's average cost basis, and the 200-week moving average have historically provided useful proxies for terminal cycle-low regions during deep bear markets. These levels currently sit at $53.5k and $62k, respectively, with our base case being that terminal valuation forms somewhere within this range. However, in the event of further downside, the LTH Realised Price at $48k remains the next key pricing level below.

To the upside, the True Market Mean at $77.2k, representing the average purchase price of active investors, and the Short-Term Holder cost basis at $73.1k, representing the average purchase price of newer investors, have historically marked important macro and local market midpoints. Historically, a decisive reclaim of these levels has been a positive signal for renewed market momentum and a potential return of risk-on conditions.

Taken together, the market remains in a fragile post-capitulation state, with the recent decline generating one of the sharpest deteriorations in investor profitability of the cycle. Nevertheless, across multiple on-chain and price-based valuation frameworks, the market continues to trade in some of its lowest historical percentiles, as discussed in our recent note here.

At the same time, the dominance of HODLing among Long-Term Holders suggests that the most severe capitulation remains concentrated among newer investors and recently transitioned LTHs. From here, the Realised Price ($53.5k) and 200-week moving average ($62k) remain the key downside references, while reclaiming the Short-Term Holder cost basis ($73.1k) and True Market Mean ($77.2k) would be required to signal a more durable return of upside momentum.

Futures, Options & Perpetuals

Over the past week, BTC perpetual futures open interest declined by approximately -8.06k BTC, while CME futures open interest rose by around +7.79k BTC versus the prior week. That combination suggests leverage continued to come out of offshore perpetuals, while positioning in more institutionally oriented venues increased meaningfully.

Aggregate futures liquidations fell sharply from the prior week. In total, liquidations reached roughly $2.44bn over the week, versus $7.15bn previously, with long liquidations of $1.12bn and short liquidations of $1.31bn.

After last week's sharp crypto selloff and Bitcoin's bounce from the 200-week moving average, BTC recovered modestly. The move was supported by the successful SpaceX IPO and reports that the US and Iran were close to a deal, which helped improve broader risk sentiment. Liquidity is now forming around $63k on the downside and $65k on the upside, giving the market a tighter range to trade against in the near term.

Perpetual funding rates, measured on a 7-day moving average, ended the week lower at around +1.76% annualised, down from +5.97% last week. That suggests futures positioning has become less aggressive, with leveraged long demand cooling despite the modest recovery in spot.

At the same time, the BTC 3-month annualised basis ticked down slightly to around +3.07%. That leaves the futures curve still modestly positive, but flatter than last week, reinforcing the view that positioning has improved after the deleveraging event without yet signalling a strong bullish impulse over the next few months.

In options markets, BTC Deribit options open interest increased modestly by roughly +10.3k BTC, bringing total open interest up to 428.6k BTC. The Deribit put-to-call open interest ratio decreased slightly to 0.60, while the equivalent metric across IBIT options moved slightly higher to 0.71 by week's end.

Taken together, these moves suggest options exposure rebuilt modestly while positioning became more mixed across crypto-native and ETF-linked options markets. The decline in the Deribit put-to-call ratio points to less relative demand for downside protection among crypto-native participants, while the move higher in the IBIT ratio suggests ETF-linked options investors remained somewhat more defensive.

The 25-delta skew moved slightly lower across the term structure during the week. That suggests demand for downside protection eased modestly, consistent with the stabilisation in spot following last week's sharp liquidation event.

Total GEX, on a 7-day moving average basis, decreased from -$1.09bn to -$2.50bn. This suggests dealer positioning has become more negative again, increasing the potential for hedging flows to amplify moves around nearby strike levels. In practical terms, the market may now be more mechanically reactive than it was a week ago.

Dealer gamma exposure also remains concentrated around important nearby levels, with the bulk of negative gamma still clustered around the $65k strike. That leaves the market most sensitive to a renewed move towards that level, particularly if spot pushes back into the upper end of the current liquidity range. By contrast, positive gamma has moved closer to the $63k area, suggesting stabilising dealer flows may sit nearer to downside support.

In short, Bitcoin stabilised after last week's sharp deleveraging, bouncing from its 200-week moving average as risk sentiment improved on the successful SpaceX IPO and reports of progress toward a US-Iran deal. Liquidations fell sharply to $2.44bn from $7.15bn, while perpetual funding cooled to +1.76%, suggesting leverage has been rebuilt more cautiously. With CME open interest rising, basis still positive, options positioning mixed and dealer gamma more negative again, prices remain sensitive around the $63k to $65k zone.

Bottom Line

  • Performance: Cross-asset performance staged a sharp reversal, with cryptoassets outperforming as a looming US-Iran peace deal drained geopolitical risk out of the system. Bitcoin based around $61k mid-week before rallying close to 3% to roughly $65k in early Monday trading, while equities recovered most of their recent losses and gold - the mirror image - slipped towards $4,000/oz, heading for a second consecutive weekly decline.
  • Cryptoasset Sentiment Index: Our Cryptoasset Sentiment Index has recovered from last week's deeply bearish readings - the most pessimistic since February - and is now signalling slightly bullish sentiment as of this morning. The earlier sentiment washout made a short-term reversal likely, although with the broader backdrop still fragile we would treat the current bounce as a relief rally rather than a confirmed trend change.
  • Chart-of-the-Week: On the Mayer Multiple (price relative to the 200-day moving average), Bitcoin has fallen back below 1.0 while Nvidia continues to trade at a sizeable premium to its own 200-day average. Measured against their respective long-term trends, Bitcoin screens as deep value precisely while semiconductor and AI equities remain extended, leaving the relative-value gap between Bitcoin and the most crowded corner of the equity market among the widest on this metric.

Appendix

Bitcoin Price vs Cryptoasset Sentiment Index Bitcoin Price vs Crypto Sentiment Index
Source: Bloomberg, Coinmarketcap, Glassnode, NilssonHedge, alternative.me, Bitwise Europe
Cryptoasset Sentiment Index: Subcomponents Crypto Sentiment Index Bar Chart
Source: Bloomberg, Coinmarketcap, Glassnode, NilssonHedge, alternative.me, Bitwise Europe; *multiplied by (-1)
TradFi Sentiment Indicators Crypto Market Compass TradFi Indicators
Source: Bloomberg, NilssonHedge, Bitwise Europe
Crypto Sentiment Indicators Crypto Market Compass Sentiment Indicators
Source: Coinmarketcap, alternative.me, Bitwise Europe
Crypto Options' Sentiment Indicators Crypto Market Compass Option Indicators
Source: Glassnode, Bitwise Europe
Crypto Futures & Perpetuals' Sentiment Indicators Crypto Market Compass Futures Indicators
Source: Glassnode, Bitwise Europe; *Inverted
Crypto On-Chain Indicators Crypto Market Compass OnChain Indicators
Source: Glassnode, Bitwise Europe
Bitcoin vs Crypto Fear & Greed Index Bitcoin Price vs Crypto Fear Greed
Source: alternative.me, Coinmarketcap, Bitwise Europe
Cryptoasset Sentiment Index: Daily vs Hourly Crypto Sentiment Index Daily vs Hourly
Source: Bloomberg, Coinmarketcap, Glassnode, NilssonHedge, alternative.me, CFGI.io, Bitwise Europe
Bitcoin vs Global Crypto ETP Fund Flows BTC vs All Crypto ETP Funds Fund Flows Daily long PCT
Source: Bloomberg, Bitwise Europe; ETPs only, data subject to change
Global Crypto ETP Fund Flows All Crypto ETP Funds Fund Flows Daily short
Source: Bloomberg, Bitwise Europe; ETPs only; data subject to change
US Spot Bitcoin ETF Fund Flows US Spot Bitcoin ETF Funds Fund Flows Daily since launch
Source: Bloomberg, Bitwise Europe; data subject to change
US Spot Bitcoin ETFs: Flows since launch US Spot Bitcoin ETF Fund Flows since launch
Source: Bloomberg, Fund flows since trading launch on 11/01/24 except MSBT launched on the 08/04/2026
Data subject to change
US Spot Bitcoin ETFs: 5-days flow US Spot Bitcoin ETF Fund Flows 5d
Source: Bloomber; data subject to change
US Bitcoin ETFs: Net Fund Flows since 11th Jan mn USD US Spot Bitcoin ETF Table
Source: Bloomberg, Bitwise Europe; data as of 12-06-2026
US Spot Ethereum ETF Fund Flows US Spot Ethereum ETF Funds Fund Flows Daily since launch
Source: Bloomberg, Bitwise Europe; data subject to change
US Spot Ethereum ETFs: Flows since launch (mn USD) US Spot Ethereum ETF Fund Flows since launch
Source: Bloomberg, Fund flows since trading launch on 23/07/24; data subject on change
US Spot Ethereum ETFs: 5-days flow US Spot Ethereum ETF Fund Flows 5d
Source: Bloomberg; data subject on change
US Ethereum ETFs: Net Fund Flows since 23rd July (mn USD) US Spot Ethereum ETF Table
Source: Bloomberg, Bitwise Europe; data as of 12-06-2026
Bitcoin Price vs CME Bitcoin Commercials Positioning Bitcoin Price vs CME COT Bitcoin Futures Commercials Positioning
Source: alternative.me, Coinmarketcap, Bitwise Europe
Combined positioning = futures and options in % of Ol
Altseason Index (% of alts outperforming BTC) Altseason Index short
Source: Coinmetrics, Bitwise Europe
Bitcoin vs Crypto Dispersion Index Crypto Dispersion vs Bitcoin short
Source: Coinmarketcap, Bitwise Europe; Dispersion = (1 - Average Altcoin Correlation with Bitcoin)
Bitcoin Price vs Futures Basis Rate BTC 3m Basis
Source: Glassnode, Bitwise Europe; data as of 2026-06-14
Ethereum Price vs Futures Basis Rate ETH 3m Basis
Source: Glassnode, Bitwise Europe; data as of 2026-06-14
BTC Net Exchange Volume by Size Bitcoin Net Exchange Volume by Size
Source: Glassnode, Bitwise Europe

Important Information

This material is intended solely for professional investors and is not suitable for retail distribution and reliance.

The information provided in this material is for illustrative, educational or information purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation or solicitation of an offer to buy any product or to make any investment.

This document (which may be subject to change and may be in the form of a presentation, press release, social media post, blog post, broadcast communication or similar instrument – we refer to this category of communications generally as a “document” for purposes of this disclaimer) is issued by Bitwise Europe GmbH (“BEU” or “the Issuer”). This document has been prepared in accordance with applicable laws and regulations (including those relating to financial promotions).

Bitwise Europe GmbH, incorporated under the laws of Germany, is the issuer of Exchange Traded Products (“ETPs”) described in this document under a base prospectus and final terms, which may be supplemented from time to time, and which are approved by BaFin. If you are considering investing in products issued by BEU you should check with independent financial adviser, your broker or bank that such products are available in your jurisdiction and suitable for your investment profile. A decision to invest any amount in an ETPs offered by BEU should take into consideration your specific circumstances after seeking independent investment, tax and legal advice.

Capital at risk. Cryptoassets are high-risk and volatile. The value of investments in cryptoassets and crypto-linked ETPs may fall as well as rise, and investors may lose some or all of their invested capital. No investor protection or compensation scheme applies. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees.

You should read the relevant base prospectus and final terms before investing and, in particular, the section entitled ‘Risk Factors' for further details of risks associated with an investment. The prospectuses, final terms and other documents relevant to BEU's ETPs are available under the “Resources” section at www.bitwiseinvestments.com. When visiting this website, you will need to self-certify as to your jurisdiction and investor type in order to access these documents, and in so doing you may be subject to other disclaimers and important information.

Important Analytical Limitations: The observations and analyses presented in this document are based on historical market patterns and data correlations which may not repeat or continue in future market conditions. Past correlations between capital flows and performance metrics are not indicative of future performance and should not be extrapolated as predictive indicators. Material downside risks remain present across all investment timeframes regardless of current undervaluation metrics or favorable technical indicators. All model outputs, fair value calculations, and quantitative assessments are subject to significant uncertainty and methodological limitations, and should not be relied upon as the sole basis for making investment decisions. Investors should conduct independent due diligence and consider multiple factors beyond the scope of this analysis.

Read the full disclaimer here: https://bitwiseinvestments.eu/disclaimer/

About Bitwise

Bitwise is one of the world’s leading crypto specialist asset managers. Thousands of financial advisors, family offices, and institutional investors across the globe have partnered with us to understand and access the opportunities in crypto. Since 2017, Bitwise has established a track record of excellence managing a broad suite of delta-one, index and active solutions across ETPs, ETFs, separately managed accounts, private funds, and hedge fund strategies, spanning both the U.S. and Europe.

Contact

General Inquiries europe@bitwiseinvestments.com
Institutional investors clients@bitwiseinvestments.com

Related articles you may like

Welcome to Bitwise

Select your location

Welcome to Bitwise

Confirm your location to help us deliver the site experience most relevant to you

Welcome to Bitwise

Confirm your location to help us deliver the site experience most relevant to you

Welcome to Bitwise

Confirm your location to help us deliver the site experience most relevant to you

Switch to local website

We noticed you may be accessing this website from a different location than the one currently selected.

  • English
  • Deutsch
  • Italiano
  • Français
  • Svenska
Country
  • English
  • Deutsch
  • Italiano
  • Français
  • Svenska
Country
Important Notice:
The distribution of the information and material on this website may be restricted by law in certain countries. None of the information is directed at, or is intended for distribution to, or use by, any person or entity in any jurisdiction (by virtue of nationality, place of residence, domicile or registered office) where publication, distribution or use of such information would be contrary to local law or regulation.
Important Notice:
You are about to access the Bitwise Asset Management website. Based on your location, clicking 'Proceed to US website' below will redirect you to the US-specific website.
Important Information – Please Read Before Proceeding

This website is operated by Bitwise Europe GmbH (“Bitwise”, “we”, “us”). The information on this website is intended for UK retail clients and other visitors in the United Kingdom. If you are not in the UK, local laws and rules may differ and the materials here may not be appropriate for you.

All content is provided for general information only. It does not constitute investment advice, tax or legal advice, an offer, or a solicitation to buy or sell any investment and must not be relied upon to make an investment decision. You should consider whether an investment is suitable for your circumstances and, where appropriate, seek independent professional advice.

Cryptoassets and crypto-linked products are high-risk. The FCA categorises retail crypto promotions as Restricted Mass Market Investments (RMMI). As such, additional prominence, risk-warning and risk-summary requirements apply to retail communications. You could lose all the money you invest.

Investments in cryptoassets or many crypto-linked products are generally not covered by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) or the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS). You should not expect to be protected if something goes wrong.

Access to certain pages, features, or transactions may be subject to client categorisation and appropriateness assessments required by FCA rules. We may ask you to complete checks or declarations before you can proceed.

Where this website contains a retail financial promotion for crypto or other RMMIs, you will see the FCA-prescribed risk warning and a link (“Take 2 mins to learn more”) to the FCA risk summary presented in a pop-up or dedicated page. For convenience, you can access that summary here at any time.

Where performance is shown, past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Any projections, targets, or forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain and may not be realised. Fees and expenses reduce returns.

Returns may be reduced by fees, charges, spreads, and taxes. Tax treatment depends on individual circumstances and may change. Seek professional advice if unsure.

Where a prospectus (including any base or supplemental prospectus) or KID/PRIIPs KIID or equivalent is provided, it is regulatory disclosure, not marketing. Those documents are generally outside the UK financial-promotion restriction.

In line with FCA rules for high-risk investments, we do not offer incentives to invest (e.g., refer-a-friend bonuses, monetary/non-monetary perks) in relation to retail crypto promotions.

External links are provided for convenience only. We do not control and are not responsible for third-party websites or their content. We take reasonable care to ensure accuracy but do not guarantee completeness, timeliness, or availability of the website or its contents; information may change without notice.

Our products or services may not be available in all jurisdictions or to all investors. Access may be restricted by law. You are responsible for understanding and complying with applicable laws and regulations.

For queries or complaints, contact: clients@bitwiseinvestments.com | Additional contact and legal information is available in our Terms of Website Use and Privacy Policy.

Copyright & trademarks © 2025 Bitwise. All rights reserved. Product names, logos and brands are property of their respective owners

The selected location is intended only for people resident in that country. If you are accessing from the UK, you should not use this version of the website or access the products and services shown here, as they are not available in your country and may not be suitable for you.

We recommend switching to your local version of our website to view information relevant to your jurisdiction.

Avis Important

Les produits d’investissement domiciliés en Europe et présentés sur ce site sont des Exchange Traded Commodities (« ETC »), instruments financiers considérés comme des titres de créances complexes par l'Autorité des Marchés Financiers, présentant des risques difficilement compréhensibles par le grand public. À ce titre, leur distribution en France répond à des règles spécifiques. Il relève de la responsabilité des intermédiaires et investisseurs professionnels souhaitant offrir des ETCs à leurs clients de s'assurer que leur distribution auxdits clients est réalisée dans le respect de la réglementation française.

Terms of website use

Please read these terms carefully before using this website. By clicking on “Accept” and by accessing the website on an ongoing basis, you are deemed to have read, understood and accepted these Terms of Website Use.

The distribution of the information and material on this Website may be restricted by law in certain countries. None of the information is directed at, or is intended for distribution to, or use by, any person or entity in any jurisdiction (by virtue of nationality, place of residence, domicile or registered office) where publication, distribution or use of such information would be contrary to local law or regulation. By clicking on “Accept” and by accessing the website on an ongoing basis you attest that you are a professional investor or are otherwise allowed to access this website pursuant to all applicable laws.

You must not use or attempt to use any automated program (including, without limitation, any spider or other web crawler) to access our system or in relation to this Website.

We may change these Terms of Website Use from time to time. Any changes we may make will be posted on this website. By continuing to use and access this website following such changes, you agree to be bound by any changes we make. Please review this page frequently to see any updates or changes to these Terms.

If you are in the UK, US or Canada

Information available on this website is not, and under no circumstances is to be construed as, an advertisement or any other step in furtherance of a public offering in the United States, to, or for the account or benefit of, any U.S. Person or in Canada, or any state, province or territory thereof, where neither the Issuer nor its products are authorised or registered for distribution or sale and where no prospectus of the Issuer has been filed with any securities regulator. Neither this website nor information it contains should be accessed by a US person or legal entity or taken, transmitted or distributed (directly or indirectly) into the United States.

This document does not constitute an invitation or inducement to engage in investment activity. In the UK, this document is provided for information purposes and directed only at investment professionals (as defined under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 as amended from time to time). It is not intended for use by, or directed at, retail customers or any person who does not have professional experience in matters relating to investment in cryptocurrencies and crypto-backed ETPs. Neither the Issuer nor its products are authorised or regulated by the UK Financial Conduct Authority.

No advice

Nothing on this website should be considered to be investment, legal, tax or any other advice nor is it to be relied on in making an investment decision. All investors should obtain independent investment advice and inform themselves as to applicable legal requirements, exchange control regulations and taxes in their jurisdiction.

The information on this website is provided for information purposes only. The fact that Bitwise has provided it does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any particular product or to engage in any other related transaction. The products involve a high degree of risk and are not necessarily suitable for everyone. The products presented in this section of the website are intended for sale only to sophisticated investors who are able to understand and bear the risks involved. They may not be suitable for you.

In preparing the information in this section of the Website, Bitwise has not taken into account your individual investment objectives, financial situation or investment needs. Nothing in the website constitutes or is intended to constitute financial, legal, accounting or tax advice. Neither Bitwise or any affiliate will provide or purport to provide you with investment advice as a result of your use of this website. Accessing this website does not create any contract whereby Bitwise agrees or undertakes to provide you with any information or investment advice. The information on this website is provided solely on the basis that you will make your own investment decisions.

Limitation of Liability

Neither Bitwise nor any of its affiliates, directors, officers or employees shall be responsible or will be liable for any loss or damage including consequential or indirect damage or loss of profit, arising in any way from the use of, or inability to use, this website or any reliance placed on the information it contains. The website is provided on an "as is" basis. Whilst we take all reasonable care to ensure the information published on this website is up to date and as accurate as possible, Bitwise does not guarantee or warrant that this website, or any services or content on it, will always be accurate, available or provided uninterrupted. We may suspend, withdraw, discontinue or change all or any part of this website without notice. We do not guarantee that this website will be secure or free from bugs or viruses. You agree that your use of this website is at your own risk.

Certain documents made available on this Website may have been prepared and issued by persons other than Bitwise. Bitwise is not responsible in any way for the content of any such documents. The website may also contain hyperlinks to external websites that are not under the control of Bitwise. Bitwise does not approve or endorse the contents of such websites and does not control or take any responsibility for the content of any such websites.

Risk Warnings

  • Cryptocurrencies and products linked to cryptocurrencies are highly volatile.
  • You can lose some or all of your investment.
  • Risks of investing are numerous and include market, price, currency, liquidity, operational, legal and regulatory risks.
  • Exchange traded products do not offer a fixed income or match precisely the performance of the underlying cryptocurrency.
  • Investment in cryptocurrencies and products linked to cryptocurrencies are only suitable for experienced investors and you should seek independent advice and check with your broker prior to investing.

All investors should read the relevant base prospectus and final terms contained on this website before investing and, in particular, the section entitled ‘Risk Factors' for further details of risks associated with an investment.

General

The website is owned and operated by Bitwise Europe Management Ltd., a company registered in England and Wales under number 12165332 with its registered office at 6th Floor, 60 Bishopsgate, London EC2N 4AW, United Kingdom. You can contact us by email at europe@bitwiseinvestments.com.

References to “Bitwise”, “we”, “us” and “our” in these Terms of Website Use refer to Bitwise Europe Management Ltd. and our affiliates.

All content and the design of this Website are owned by Bitwise or our licensors and protected by copyright and other applicable laws. Any copying of the website or of its content requires the prior written consent of Bitwise.

Bitwise respects the privacy of users. Please see our Privacy Policy for information setting out how we handle personal information collected through the Website.

Avis Important

Les produits présentés sur ce site internet ne sont ni destinés à être distribués, ni accessibles aux investisseurs non-professionnels résidant en France. Toute information figurant sur ce site est fournie à titre informatif uniquement. Pour toute information complémentaire, veuillez contacter votre conseiller financier ou votre intermédiaire habituel.