Bitcoin (BTC) jumped more than 5% over the weekend, pushing back above $93,000, and Wall Street has a tidy explanation ready: Venezuela, oil prices, inflation cooling, rate cuts coming. There's just one problem with that story—it's wrong.
The Venezuela Theory Doesn't Hold Up
According to Ryan Rasmussen, Head of Research at Bitwise Invest, the narrative connecting Bitcoin's rally to Venezuela-driven oil supply changes is fundamentally flawed. The theory goes like this: more oil supply means lower inflation, which means faster interest rate cuts, which means Bitcoin goes up. Neat and simple.
Except the data doesn't support it. Market-implied probabilities for 25-basis-point rate cuts in January and December 2026 were essentially flat before and after Nicolás Maduro's capture. Short-term rate cut odds actually declined slightly.
"Bitcoin is moving on structural forces, not headlines," Rasmussen said.
What's Actually Driving the Rally
Rasmussen points to several real catalysts that were already gaining momentum before anyone started talking about Venezuelan oil:
Institutional adoption through spot Bitcoin ETFs continues accelerating, with major players like Morgan Stanley (MS), Wells Fargo (WFC), and Merrill Lynch deploying fresh capital. The post-2024 regulatory environment has become notably more crypto-friendly, attracting long-term institutional allocators who previously sat on the sidelines.
Add to that renewed AI-driven risk appetite sweeping across markets and monetary easing expectations for 2026 that were priced in well before recent political developments, and you've got a much more convincing explanation for Bitcoin's strength.
Breaking the Four-Year Cycle
Back in mid-December 2025, Rasmussen made a bold prediction: Bitcoin would break its traditional four-year cycle and push to new all-time highs, setting up 2026 as a "pullback year."
He also expects ETFs to absorb more than 100% of new supply for Bitcoin, Ethereum (ETH), and Solana (SOL) as institutional demand keeps building. That's a structural shift that matters far more than any single headline about oil production or geopolitical drama.
The Venezuela story makes for good headlines, but the real action is happening in the slow, steady march of institutional capital into crypto.




