Bitcoin (BTC) may still deliver a parabolic rally, but CryptoQuant founder Ki Young Ju says the next move needs deeper institutional capital.
Ki Young Ju said Bitcoin can still see a seismic price surge, but only if institutional allocation grows enough to absorb trillions in new capital.
The CryptoQuant founder made the argument in a post on X, where he said Bitcoin’s capital efficiency has weakened as the asset has matured.
In earlier cycles, smaller inflows produced extreme gains. Ju said $2.7 billion in net inflows helped drive a 55,436% Bitcoin surge in 2011, while $68 billion supported a 10,000% rally from 2015 to 2017.
The pattern has changed. From 2018 to 2021, about $364 billion in inflows coincided with a roughly 2,000% gain, while nearly $700 billion since 2022 has produced a 689% increase.
Ju said Bitcoin must become a core macro asset and absorb more than $1 trillion in realized capitalization before a larger rally can take hold.
“The next parabolic bull cycle will likely require trillions in net capital inflows, which means institutional adoption needs to truly take off,” Ju wrote on X.
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Institutional exposure has reached record levels, but the market has not responded as it did in earlier cycles.
Bitcoin trades below $60,000, down 53% from its October 2025 record high of $126,198. In early June, a CryptoQuant analyst said the asset could bottom near $53,000 before attempting a recovery.
Public companies now hold more than 1.2 million BTC, according to Bitcoin Treasuries data cited in the report. That represents more than 5% of the total supply.
The buying has followed the Strategy model, with firms such as Metaplanet, Twenty One Capital and Strive adding Bitcoin to their balance sheets.
Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds have also pulled traditional investors into the market, with assets under management above $100 billion.
The debate follows Bitcoin’s sharp reversal from late 2025, when the asset set its record high in October before sliding below $60,000. That drop explains why Ju’s capital argument matters now: institutions are present, but not yet large enough to overpower selling pressure.
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