The numbers tell two very different stories about Bitcoin right now. On one side, institutional investors are pouring money into US spot ETFs at a pace that has already erased the year’s earlier outflows. On the other, a quiet but accelerating threat from quantum computing is raising questions about the security of roughly one-third of all Bitcoin ever mined.
The market’s mood, captured by the Fear and Greed Index, remains cautious. Yet beneath that surface anxiety, a massive accumulation campaign is underway. US spot Bitcoin ETFs have now recorded eight consecutive days of inflows, pulling in approximately $2.4 billion in April alone. The cumulative net assets under management across all US spot ETFs now stand at $102 billion.
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust has been the dominant force, absorbing more than 73% of recent inflows. On a single day, the fund drew nearly $168 million — three-quarters of that day’s total volume. The asset manager now controls 809,870 Bitcoin. The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust, which launched on April 8, has yet to record a single day of outflows.
Analysts see a structural shift taking place. Institutional investors are increasingly using ETFs for long-term allocations rather than short-term speculation. The latest buying spree absorbed roughly 19,000 Bitcoin — nearly nine times the amount miners produced over the same period.
Price Lags Behind Demand
Despite the relentless buying pressure, Bitcoin’s price has remained stubbornly range-bound. The cryptocurrency currently trades around $78,260, still down nearly 12% year-to-date. One factor weighing on the market: continued outflows from Grayscale’s fund, which has lost almost $1 billion this year.
The technical picture offers some encouragement. Bitcoin has stabilized roughly 10% above its 50-day moving average, though it remains about 9% below the 200-day average. Analysts at VanEck point to deeply negative funding rates on the derivatives market as a contrarian bullish signal. Speculators are heavily positioned for further declines — an extreme that has historically preceded upward reversals.
On-chain analysts flag the $80,000 zone as critical resistance. Short-term holders may look to take profits there, potentially using ETF buying as exit liquidity. The upcoming Federal Reserve meeting next week will test whether the rally can break through.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Bitcoin?
The Quantum Shadow
While the ETF story dominates headlines, a separate development has quietly rattled the Bitcoin security community. An independent researcher successfully broke an elliptic-curve key on publicly available quantum hardware for the first time. The key was only 15 bits long — Bitcoin’s encryption uses 256 bits — but the demonstration won the Q-Day Prize from Project Eleven and represents a 512-fold improvement over the previous public demonstration from September 2025.
The immediate threat to Bitcoin’s network remains distant. But Google Quantum AI showed in late March that a superconducting machine with fewer than 500,000 physical qubits could potentially crack a 256-bit key in about nine minutes. Earlier estimates had placed the threshold in the millions of qubits. The barrier is falling faster than expected.
That makes a concrete vulnerability visible. Roughly 6.9 million Bitcoin — about a third of all coins ever mined — sit in wallets with publicly exposed keys. Any address that has ever sent a transaction is vulnerable, because spending permanently reveals the key. Even Satoshi Nakamoto’s estimated 1 million Bitcoin fall into this category.
A Governance Challenge
Migrating these coins to quantum-resistant addresses is technically feasible. Politically, it is far more difficult. Ethereum has a foundation and an established upgrade process. Bitcoin has neither. Its development culture treats central authority as a bug — a principle that has kept the network stable for nearly two decades but structurally complicates solving the quantum problem.
The proposed BIP-360 standard would offer a migration path. What remains unresolved is whether old address formats should eventually be frozen — and who would make that call.
The next mining difficulty adjustment is due in early May, with the network expecting a decline of roughly 3%. Network hash rate has already dropped noticeably. Historically, such relief for miners has often preceded positive price moves.
For now, Bitcoin’s narrative is split between two forces: the immediate, visible demand from institutional investors and the longer-term, existential question posed by quantum computing. Both are real. Both are accelerating. And both will shape where the market goes from here.
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