Peter Schiff Says Bitcoin Is Fake While BlackRock Makes It Their Top Earner

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 days ago
Gold enthusiast Peter Schiff is calling Bitcoin a fake asset as it slides from recent highs. Meanwhile, BlackRock just announced its Bitcoin ETF has become its most profitable product line. One of these narratives is backed by billions in capital flows.

Bitcoin (BTC) critic Peter Schiff is having a moment on X, and he's not wasting it. The longtime gold advocate is pointing to Bitcoin's slide from $110K to $81K — a 28% drop from all-time highs — as vindication of his long-held position. According to Schiff, this isn't about risk or volatility. Bitcoin is falling because it's "a fake asset," and the $500 billion November wipeout proves investors are finally waking up and rotating into "real assets."

It's a confident take. The only problem? While Schiff is declaring victory, the largest financial institutions on the planet are quietly doing the opposite.

BlackRock's Bitcoin Product Is Now Its Biggest Money Maker

Here's the awkward part for the Bitcoin-is-dying narrative: BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, just revealed that its Bitcoin ETF suite is now its most profitable product line. Not one of the top performers. The most profitable.

The iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) hit roughly $70 billion in assets in record time and is tracking toward $100 billion, which would place it among the largest ETFs ever launched. Even during November's selloff, inflows continued. BlackRock's own portfolios are increasing their Bitcoin allocations. If this is a fake asset, it's generating very real revenue.

Meanwhile, Institutional Adoption Keeps Growing

Schiff's timing is curious because the data doesn't support a retreat. Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) is openly discussing the possibility of adding Bitcoin to its corporate balance sheet. Kazakhstan's central bank just announced plans for a crypto allocation that could reach $300 million, funded through gold and foreign reserves.

Then there's MicroStrategy Inc. (MSTR), which has turned Bitcoin accumulation into a core business strategy, and Metaplanet, which is following a similar playbook. Holding Bitcoin on corporate balance sheets has shifted from fringe behavior to legitimate treasury strategy.

Bitcoin's volatility is real. A 28% drawdown isn't nothing. But volatility and fakeness aren't the same thing. BlackRock is seeing revenue growth. Governments are seeing diversification opportunities. Investors are seeing liquidity and hedging tools. Schiff is loud, and he's consistent. But capital flows tend to be louder. And in financial markets, money usually gets the last word.

Peter Schiff Says Bitcoin Is Fake While BlackRock Makes It Their Top Earner

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 days ago
Gold enthusiast Peter Schiff is calling Bitcoin a fake asset as it slides from recent highs. Meanwhile, BlackRock just announced its Bitcoin ETF has become its most profitable product line. One of these narratives is backed by billions in capital flows.

Bitcoin (BTC) critic Peter Schiff is having a moment on X, and he's not wasting it. The longtime gold advocate is pointing to Bitcoin's slide from $110K to $81K — a 28% drop from all-time highs — as vindication of his long-held position. According to Schiff, this isn't about risk or volatility. Bitcoin is falling because it's "a fake asset," and the $500 billion November wipeout proves investors are finally waking up and rotating into "real assets."

It's a confident take. The only problem? While Schiff is declaring victory, the largest financial institutions on the planet are quietly doing the opposite.

BlackRock's Bitcoin Product Is Now Its Biggest Money Maker

Here's the awkward part for the Bitcoin-is-dying narrative: BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, just revealed that its Bitcoin ETF suite is now its most profitable product line. Not one of the top performers. The most profitable.

The iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) hit roughly $70 billion in assets in record time and is tracking toward $100 billion, which would place it among the largest ETFs ever launched. Even during November's selloff, inflows continued. BlackRock's own portfolios are increasing their Bitcoin allocations. If this is a fake asset, it's generating very real revenue.

Meanwhile, Institutional Adoption Keeps Growing

Schiff's timing is curious because the data doesn't support a retreat. Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) is openly discussing the possibility of adding Bitcoin to its corporate balance sheet. Kazakhstan's central bank just announced plans for a crypto allocation that could reach $300 million, funded through gold and foreign reserves.

Then there's MicroStrategy Inc. (MSTR), which has turned Bitcoin accumulation into a core business strategy, and Metaplanet, which is following a similar playbook. Holding Bitcoin on corporate balance sheets has shifted from fringe behavior to legitimate treasury strategy.

Bitcoin's volatility is real. A 28% drawdown isn't nothing. But volatility and fakeness aren't the same thing. BlackRock is seeing revenue growth. Governments are seeing diversification opportunities. Investors are seeing liquidity and hedging tools. Schiff is loud, and he's consistent. But capital flows tend to be louder. And in financial markets, money usually gets the last word.