Bitcoin isn’t competing with gold, but rather prediction markets and ultra-short options

Bitcoin is suffering from an identity crisis that has nothing to do with fundamentals and everything to do with shrinking attention spans.

While gold rallied more than 12% and the S&P 500 ticked higher in the past 30 days, bitcoin slid more than 10% in a market that appeared to pose no reason to shock the largest cryptocurrency. The real story, according to NYDIG’s global head of research, Greg Cipolaro, is what he calls speculative cannibalization.

That is, the buzz of short-term speculation is creating a capital shortfall. The kind of instantly gratified, high-risk investment that once fueled bitcoin rallies is now moving to flashier alternatives like online sports betting, prediction markets and zero-day stock options that settle before the sun sets, Cipolaro said in NYDIG’s latest weekly bitcoin update.

As Cipolaro outlines, three long-building trends — expanding access to speculative markets, rising demand for fast, lottery-style payoffs and the increasing speed of financial feedback — are converging to create an environment where slower, long-duration assets like bitcoin are at a disadvantage.

The capital isn’t leaving risk entirely; it’s just reallocating to platforms that deliver immediate stimulation.

Over the past decade, markets have grown to include a wide variety of high-frequency, high-volatility venues, from sports betting apps and in-game gambling to ultra-leveraged exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and equity options that expire within the day.

These arenas offer the kind of instant gratification that appeals to speculators looking for asymmetric upside without the burden of patience, Cipolaro noted. Within crypto itself, that trend saw activity in high-beta, or fast moving, segments like memecoin trading and leveraged perpetual swaps increase.

But even these crypto-native forms of speculation are losing out to markets that offer even faster feedback loops. This drains liquidity and reflexivity from the broader crypto ecosystem, softening price discovery and diminishing the impact of speculative flows that once lifted assets like bitcoin, Cipolaro wrote.

The problem isn’t unique to crypto, it’s indicative of a growing societal preference for winner-take-most environments.

Bitcoin, in contrast, increasingly resembles a slow asset in a fast market. While its long-term performance remains strong — historically, five-year holders have never realized a loss — its short-term appeal has faded for many who prefer the emotional loop of rapid bets and instant results.

Cipolaro argued that this doesn’t undercut bitcoin’s investment case, but does create headwinds in attracting marginal capital during periods of relative apathy or distraction.

“These dynamics disadvantage assets like bitcoin that, while capable of being traded at high frequency, are best suited to be held over long periods of time,” he wrote. “As attention and capital increasingly gravitate toward faster, more reactive markets, slower-moving investment theses struggle to compete for mindshare, even when their long-term return characteristics remain intact.”

The rise of spot crypto ETFs was expected to help reignite retail interest, but that thesis now appears complicated by this simple behavioral constraint.

“Markets that offer continuous engagement and immediate feedback attract speculative participation, even when expected returns are unfavorable,” Cipolaro wrote. “As a result, marginal risk-seeking capital is increasingly absorbed by faster, more reactive venues, reducing participation in long-term investments such as bitcoin.”

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2026/02/01/how-instant-gratification-is-sucking-the-air-out-of-the-bitcoin-market