Capriole Investments founder Charles Edwards says Bitcoin has moved into a historically attractive accumulation area, but not yet the kind of deep-discount zone that defined the best buying opportunities of prior cycles. In his view, the setup is constructive for long-term holders, though still lacking the confirmation needed to call a durable bottom.
Speaking with Crypto Consulting Instituteโs Joe Shew, Edwards framed Bitcoin as โcloser to the bottom than the top,โ with multiple on-chain metrics pointing to value even as price action remains damaged. He stopped short, however, of calling the current range a standout opportunity.
โBitcoin I think you could summarize in a few words as itโs close to the bottom than the top,โ Edwards said. โBroadly trending within a value range historically in terms of onchain data and metrics. That said, itโs not at the deep value range that would be really exciting for me that weโve seen in prior cycles.โ
That distinction matters. Edwards said Capriole still holds a small net long Bitcoin position, but the levels that would make him โsuper excitedโ sit lower, around the production-cost band between roughly $50,000 and $60,000, with the low-to-mid $50,000s standing out as particularly attractive. Historically, he said, Bitcoin has spent months in that zone during major cycle lows.
For investors with a multi-year horizon, Edwards argued that some exposure still makes sense. But he cautioned that value alone is not enough. โAs with any asset, equities, anything, you can be in a value zone for a long time,โ he said. What is missing, in his telling, is a convincing signal of renewed strength through either a deeper capitulation, a technical breakout, or more durable evidence of demand.
Bitcoin Institutional Flows Improving, But Not Decisive
One of the clearest positives in Edwardsโ framework is institutional buying. He described net purchases from U.S. spot ETFs and roughly 200 treasury companies as one of the most important Bitcoin metrics today, especially when those inflows exceed daily mined supply.
โIf itโs net positive, especially if itโs above the amount of Bitcoin itโs mined per day, so itโs greater than the organic supply, then that is really positive,โ he said. โWeโve seen all the major price appreciation when thatโs net positive.โ
Still, he noted that most of those buyers remain underwater. According to Edwards, about 80% of ETFs and treasury vehicles are currently below cost basis, reinforcing what he called โtypical bear market vibes.โ A more meaningful signal, he said, would be strong flows holding for a week or two while Bitcoin stays above the $70,000 area, with a weekly close above roughly $71,500 acting as a line in the sand for a more bullish short-term outlook.
Even then, he warned that a rally into the mid-$70,000s or low $80,000s would not necessarily end the broader bearish structure.
Quantum Risk Remains The Overhang
The biggest reason Edwards is unwilling to get more aggressive is quantum computing risk, which he said is capping Bitcoinโs upside in a way previous cycles never had. He argued the market has already priced in much of that concern, but until Bitcoin Core developers begin treating it as a serious priority, upside may remain constrained.
โI honestly think we may not see new all-time highs until itโs addressed by the core team,โ Edwards said. โThe opportunity is actually skewed to the upside in that as soon as you get two or three or four core developers to start talking about it openly about solving it, I think we can get significant repricing to the upside.โ
That leaves Bitcoin in an unusual position. Edwards sees a macro backdrop that should favor hard assets, with strong liquidity conditions and gold in a long-term outperformance regime against equities. Under normal circumstances, he suggested, that would be a supportive environment for Bitcoin too. For now, though, he sees a market in value territory rather than true deep value, promising, but not yet compelling.
At press time, BTC traded at $71,466.




