Bitcoin faces worst performance in a decade as AI stocks attract investors

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Bitcoin is having the kind of year that makes hodlers reconsider their life choices. A brutal 15% weekly price drop has pushed BTC down to the $60,000-$62,000 range by early June 2026, marking one of the weakest stretches for the asset in a decade.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs hemorrhaged $2.7 billion in a single week ending around June 5, 2026. For the year so far, total outflows have surpassed $3.1 billion.

Where’s it going? Mostly into AI and semiconductor stocks, which have surged roughly 170% over the past year. While Bitcoin has shed about 40% over that same period, chip makers and AI infrastructure companies have been printing returns that make crypto’s glory days look modest by comparison.

Bitcoin, once the de facto “high-growth” allocation for institutions dipping their toes into alternative assets, now sits as the 13th largest asset by global market capitalization. As of late May 2026, it had been overtaken by several surging AI and semiconductor names that barely registered on institutional radars two years ago.

A decade of context

Bitcoin has had bad years before. The 2018 bear market wiped out roughly 73% of its value. The 2022 crash, fueled by Terra-Luna and FTX, was similarly devastating. But those drawdowns were driven by crypto-native catalysts: fraud, contagion, overleveraged lending. What’s happening now is different. Bitcoin isn’t collapsing because something broke inside crypto. It’s declining because something outside crypto is working spectacularly well.

Bitcoin went from being a beneficiary of institutional curiosity to a funding source for the next big thing. This comes after the asset reached an all-time high of over $126,000 in October 2025.

Analysts at K33 have predicted a potentially “choppy summer” for Bitcoin as investors continue chasing AI stocks and upcoming IPOs.

What this means for investors

The $3.1 billion in year-to-date ETF outflows creates a mechanical problem. Bitcoin ETFs were supposed to be a one-way valve, constantly absorbing supply and providing price support. When that valve reverses, selling pressure compounds. Each wave of outflows pushes prices lower, which triggers more outflows, which pushes prices lower still.

Miners and crypto participants are also reallocating resources towards AI and high-performance computing, indicating a significant pivot in strategy. Anticipated IPOs in the AI sector, such as SpaceX, are drawing additional capital away from crypto assets.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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