
Markets in 2026 have been a study in concentration.
The Nasdaq Composite Index (NASDAQ: .IXIC) and the S&P 500 Index (SP: .INX) keep printing record highs, powered by the companies racing to build the artificial intelligence economy â chips, memory, data centres, and the cash-hungry giants spending big to win.Â
Record-breaking listings are adding to the frenzy, with Elon Musk’s SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) set to debut on the Nasdaq in what may be the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history.
Amid all that exuberance, one asset has been left behind.
Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) is down more than 40% over the past 12 months and around 28% since the start of the year. It now trades near US$62,000, well below the record high of roughly US$126,000 set last spring. More than US$1 trillion in value has evaporated in eight months.
So what is going on?
Follow the liquidity
Bitcoin has a fixed supply. Only 21 million coins will ever exist, and that ceiling is hard-coded. When supply cannot move, price becomes a story about demand â and demand is really a story about where money is flowing.
Right now, capital is chasing momentum. The headlines belong to AI, semiconductors, memory, and mega-IPOs, and money tends to follow the loudest narrative. SpaceX’s listing alone is expected to soak up tens of billions of dollars in fresh capital. Every dollar committed to the next hot story is a dollar not parked in Bitcoin.
This matters because Bitcoin no longer trades in its own universe. Since spot Bitcoin ETFs arrived and large institutions gained easy access, the asset has behaved like any other risk play â rallying when liquidity is loose and sagging when it tightens. With markets now pricing in the possibility of higher-for-longer interest rates, the easy money that once lifted speculative assets is harder to find.
Bitcoin isn’t alone
If this were purely a crypto problem, you might expect everything else to be flying. It isn’t.
Gold and silver, the traditional safe havens, have also come off the boil after strong runs. And closer to home, plenty of quality smaller companies have drifted sideways or lower despite solid fundamentals underneath them. Good businesses are being ignored not because anything broke, but because attention â and capital â is pooling in a handful of crowded trades.
That is the story of 2026 so far. When liquidity converges on one theme, even sound assets can be starved of buyers. Price and value can part ways for a while.
None of this makes Bitcoin “safe”. It remains a speculative asset whose future hinges on unresolved questions â how regulators treat it, how central banks set policy, whether it earns lasting status as a store of value, and how widely it gets used as an alternative form of money. Those debates are far from settled.
Foolish Takeaway
It helps to remember Bitcoin’s character. Its history is a cycle of brutal drawdowns followed by recoveries that have, so far, climbed even higher than before. Falls of 50% or more are not new. They have happened repeatedly, and each time, the obituaries were written early.
That pattern is no guarantee. But it is a reminder that volatility is the toll Bitcoin charges, not necessarily a sign the journey has ended.
For now, the share market’s record-setting names are absorbing the oxygen, and Bitcoin is paying the price for being yesterday’s headline. Liquidity, though, is restless. It rotates. When the AI euphoria cools and attention broadens again, the assets left behind in 2026 may look very different in hindsight. Patient investors who understand what they own â and can stomach the swings â are usually the ones still standing when the cycle turns.
The post Why is the Bitcoin price down while shares hit highs? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Leigh Gant owns Bitcoin. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Bitcoin. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.Â