Robert Mitchnick, who leads digital assets strategy at BlackRock, warned that leverage-fuelled turbulence in derivatives markets could damage the very narrative many bulls use to sell institutions on Bitcoin.
The core issue is simple: if bitcoin keeps moving like a turbo-charged risk asset whipped around by liquidations, it becomes harder to frame it as long-term digital gold or a portfolio diversifier.
Mitchnick pointed the spotlight at perpetual futures, margin positions, and fast-money trades that can overwhelm organic supply-and-demand signals. When traders pile into crowded positions, even a modest price move can trigger automated liquidations. That forces more buying or selling, which triggers more liquidations and boom, volatility feeds on itself.
For institutions that obsess over risk models, that kind of reflexive structure is a headache. Pension committees and sovereign allocators want predictability in how an asset behaves under stress. Violent, mechanically driven swings make that job tougher.
Big money isn’t just asking, “Will the number go up?”
They’re asking:
If the answers point back to offshore leverage and rapid-fire deleveraging, conservative capital may hesitate. Mitchnick’s argument suggests adoption headlines alone don’t equal maturity. You can have billions in ETF flows and still see price action dominated by short-term leverage.
One notable angle: the BlackRock executive did not blame spot exchange-traded funds.
Instead, he implied that many of the sharp intraday air pockets originate in derivatives venues where leverage is easily available, and risk controls differ from traditional markets.
That distinction matters. ETFs are often marketed as the bridge bringing stability and institutional discipline. Mitchnick is effectively saying the bridge exists, but the storm is still raging on the other side.
For years, crypto advocates have compared bitcoin to gold: scarce, global, resistant to monetary debasement. But gold typically doesn’t crash or rip 10% in hours because a wave of traders got margin-called. Narratives matter on Wall Street. Once they harden, they can stick.
If that pattern keeps repeating, committees might classify bitcoin closer to high-beta equities than to defensive assets. That shift in perception could influence allocation sizes, portfolio roles, and risk budgets.
What Could Change Going Forward
Mitchnick’s warning will likely amplify calls for:
None of that happens overnight. But institutions listening to BlackRock tend to take notes. In the meantime, traders should expect liquidation cascades to remain part of the landscape. Fast markets are great for opportunity, but brutal for anyone caught leaning the wrong way.
Bitcoin’s long-term believers still see adoption growing, infrastructure improving, and access widening.
Yet one of the most influential asset managers on the planet just highlighted a structural vulnerability: leverage can distort behaviour enough to blur the investment case. For allocators deciding whether to step in, that’s not background noise. That’s central to the thesis.
If Bitcoin wants to win bigger institutional trust, the market may need to look less like a casino during stress and more like a hedge when it counts.
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