Key Takeaways
Bitcoin’s price gains are attributed to recovering market liquidity and increased institutional demand.
Coinbase’s John D’Agostino clarifies that the recent Bitcoin rally is not directly linked to events in Venezuela.
Share this article
Bitcoinâs recent rally is being driven by recovering market liquidity and strong institutional demand rather than geopolitical events like the US intervention in Venezuela or the capture of Nicolas Maduro, according to John DâAgostino, Coinbaseâs head of institutional strategy.
âItâs a massive geopolitical event. That narrative certainly holds as a long-term thesis, that proof of Bitcoin as a temporary currency to replace a destabilized currency. Thatâs fine. I also hear the argument that weâre probably going to have lower oil prices. Historically, the Fed has eased during lower oil price conditions,â said DâAgostino, speaking on CNBCâs âSquawk Boxâ today.
âHowever, usually thatâs a demand issue versus a supply issue. Iâve got to be honest. I donât see any direct evidence that whatâs happening in Venezuela is directly applicable,â he added.
DâAgostino highlighted market makers rebuilding positions as a key factor driving Bitcoin higher, along with rising retail sentiment, strong institutional momentum, and Bitcoinâs decades-long performance as a store of value.
According to him, Bitcoin has gained over 11,000% in the past decade compared to goldâs 260% and the S&P 500âs roughly 300% rise.
âWeâre seeing gradual rebuilding from this liquidity event we had on October 10. The market makers are getting more comfortable with their risk parameters, adding risk back into the market,â he noted.
âWeâre seeing retail sentiment catch up to what weâve known on the institutional side. So retail sentiment [is] catching up to institutional momentum,â he said.
On institutional adoption, DâAgostino said no major institution working on crypto strategies pulled back despite Bitcoinâs 6% decline in 2025.
âI donât know of a single large company that doesnât have an AI and blockchain strategy, or at least thinks of one,â he said.
He noted that regulatory momentum has accelerated institutional timelines rather than slowed them.
DâAgostino also addressed Bitcoinâs volatility concerns, acknowledging that while the asset remains volatile, it has become less so over time.
He pointed to expanding use cases, including new regulations allowing Bitcoin as mortgage collateral and partnerships enabling spending at thousands of vendors.
Regarding ongoing public skepticism around crypto, DâAgostino said that senior institutional leaders no longer openly doubt Bitcoinâs viability. He noted that few, if any, executives at the partner level would now claim Bitcoin is going to zero.
âIf you think that now at a partner level, youâre keeping your mouth shut, because itâs a bit embarrassing,â he said.