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    The AI boom looks like dot-com mania, but Bitcoin bulls have one profitable reason to keep buying

    Bitcoin’s macro setup is increasingly tied to the same forces driving the S&P 500 to new highs: liquidity, concentration, rate expectations, and investor tolerance for stretched valuations.

    The current S&P 500 structure shows an index still moving in a powerful long-term uptrend, with price near 7,365 on the weekly chart, while valuation indicators sit in historically elevated territory.

    That combination creates a constructive backdrop for Bitcoin in the near term, with a clear condition attached.

    BTC benefits while the equity trend remains intact.

    Fragility rises if expensive equities begin to roll over under the weight of rates, earnings pressure, or volatility.

    The current market regime is best understood through the three layers of the S&P 500 chart below.

    S&P 500 performance since 2019S&P 500 performance since 2019
    S&P 500 performance since 2019

    The first layer is price.

    The index remains in a secular advance, with higher highs and higher lows surviving the dot-com crash, the global financial crisis, the COVID shock, the 2022 tightening cycle, and the latest phase of AI-led equity concentration.

    The second layer is the equity risk premium-style signal, shown by the SPX ECY reading near 0.70.

    That level suggests investors are accepting less compensation for holding equities relative to the rate environment.

    The third layer is valuation.

    The normalized CAPE Z-score analyzer shows a CAPE reading around 38.34 and a Z-score near 2.26, placing the market in a zone the chart labels as highly overvalued.

    Independent CAPE datasets, including the Shiller PE ratio, show the same broad context: U.S. equities are expensive compared with long-run history.

    For Bitcoin, the conclusion is direct.

    The current equity setup remains supportive for high-beta assets as long as investors keep treating expensive valuations as a feature of a durable growth regime.

    BTC sits further out on the risk curve than the S&P 500 and Nasdaq.

    When macro confidence expands, Bitcoin usually receives the amplified version of that capital flow.

    When macro confidence contracts, Bitcoin usually absorbs the amplified version of the drawdown.

    Equity valuations are stretched while the trend still supports Bitcoin’s risk appetite

    The S&P 500 chart shows a market that has become expensive while maintaining trend control.

    That distinction is central for Bitcoin.

    S&P 500 performance since 1979S&P 500 performance since 1979
    S&P 500 performance since 1979

    Expensive markets can keep rising for long periods when earnings, liquidity, and narrative strength remain aligned.

    The late 1990s showed how far a technology-led cycle can run before valuation discipline returns.

    The 2020 and 2021 cycles showed how far risk assets can move when liquidity expansion, falling real yields, and speculative capital combine.

    The 2022 cycle showed the other side of the framework, when higher rates compress duration assets and expose crowded positioning.

    The current setup borrows from all three periods.

    As in the dot-com era, leadership is concentrated around a transformational technology theme. I even highlighted the comparison and potential red flag in a recent article.

    AI stock concentration flashes dot-com warning as Bitcoin miners’ pivot faces testAI stock concentration flashes dot-com warning as Bitcoin miners’ pivot faces test
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    AI stock concentration flashes dot-com warning as Bitcoin miners’ pivot faces test

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    Apr 29, 2026 · Liam ‘Akiba’ Wright

    In the late 1990s, the internet provided the dominant justification for higher multiples.

    Today, AI plays that role.

    The index has become increasingly dependent on a small group of mega-cap technology companies, with the so-called Magnificent Seven accounting for a large share of S&P 500 performance and index weight.

    That concentration gives the index strong upside when leadership works.

    It also narrows the margin for error if leadership weakens.

    However, today’s leaders have large revenue bases, high margins, and significant free cash flow, which gives the current equity cycle a stronger earnings foundation than the speculative internet bubble.

    Even so, the operational market signal is still late-cycle in character.

    The S&P 500 is rising while valuation support is thin, risk premium compensation is compressed, and the index is leaning heavily on the market’s confidence in future productivity gains.

    Bitcoin tends to perform well in precisely that kind of environment.

    When equity investors accept valuation stretch in exchange for future growth, crypto investors often move even further along the same curve.

    That is why the current S&P 500 setup is constructive for BTC rather than immediately bearish.

    The chart shows a market priced for execution.

    Bitcoin thrives when execution risk is underpriced, liquidity remains available, and investors believe the next phase of growth will justify today’s valuation premium.

    In that regime, BTC behaves less like a defensive hedge and more like a high-beta expression of macro confidence.

    The near-term implication is therefore positive.

    If the S&P 500 continues to hold its weekly trend, volatility remains contained, and AI-led earnings expectations continue to attract institutional capital, Bitcoin should remain supported.

    A rising equity market at elevated valuations can still pull BTC higher because allocators become more willing to pursue convexity.

    Bitcoin’s upside in that setting can exceed the equity move because it has a smaller capital base, stronger reflexivity, and a more direct link to liquidity expectations.

    Market dot-com bubble comparison Market dot-com bubble comparison

    Bitcoin now trades through the same liquidity channel as high-beta technology

    Bitcoin’s sensitivity to equities has changed over time.

    Earlier cycles were more isolated, driven by halving narratives, offshore leverage, crypto-native liquidity, exchange flows, and retail speculation.

    Those forces still exist, but the institutional market structure is larger now.

    The approval of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded products in January 2024 by the SEC changed the access layer.

    BTC became easier to hold inside conventional portfolios, easier to model as a macro allocation, and easier to trade as part of a broader risk basket.

    That shift has two consequences.

    First, Bitcoin has a stronger structural demand channel than in prior cycles because ETF access brings a deeper pool of potential buyers.

    Second, Bitcoin is more exposed to the same macro variables that drive institutional portfolios.

    The same investors who use the S&P 500, Nasdaq, gold, Treasury futures, and volatility products to express macro views can now use spot Bitcoin ETFs in the same allocation stack.

    That makes BTC more liquid, more legitimate, and more tied to cross-asset conditions.

    The S&P 500 valuation signal therefore becomes relevant for Bitcoin because it shows where risk appetite sits in the broader portfolio system.

    A CAPE reading near 38 and a Z-score above 2 place equities in rare valuation territory.

    That does not trigger an automatic sell signal.

    It reduces the market’s tolerance for disappointment.

    At these levels, investors need earnings to validate price, rates to avoid renewed pressure, and liquidity to remain available.

    Bitcoin benefits if those conditions hold.

    Vulnerability rises if one of those supports weakens.

    The rate channel is especially important.

    Bitcoin performs best when real yields fall, liquidity expands, and the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets declines.

    The Federal Reserve’s target-rate framework, visible through data series such as the Federal Funds Target Range, remains a central input for every duration-sensitive asset.

    When markets expect easier policy, BTC often rallies before the easing arrives.

    When policy stays restrictive for longer, speculative assets lose some of their valuation support.

    The current equity chart shows that risk assets have been able to climb despite a higher-rate regime.

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