Bitcoin extended its losses this week, plunging below $104,000 and triggering a wave of panic across crypto markets. While BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes urged investors to treat the dip as a buying opportunity, influencer Andrew Tate forecasted a far deeper crash.
The two figures’ sharply opposing outlooks underscore the uncertainty gripping the digital asset sector. Bitcoin, which hit a record $126,198 on October 7, has fallen more than 17% in ten days amid renewed US–China trade tensions and growing banking stress.
Bulls and Bears Collide Over Bitcoin’s Fate
Bitcoin dropped nearly 2% on Friday, extending a four-month low, according to Coingecko. The decline followed reports of financial strain at Zions Bank and Western Alliance Bank, fueling fears of wider contagion.
Arthur Hayes dismissed the panic as short-term noise. He wrote on X, “BTC ($107,228.00) is on sale,” adding that if the ongoing US regional banking troubles deepen into a full crisis, investors should prepare for a bailout similar to 2023.
“Be ready for a 2023-like bailout,” Hayes wrote, urging followers to “go shopping” if they have spare capital.
Hayes’ remarks highlight his confidence that renewed financial instability could drive capital back into digital assets.
“If bailouts happen again, the rebound will be stronger than 2023,” he said.
However, on-chain data point to sustained selling. Over 51,000 BTC reportedly moved from miners to exchanges last week, likely for liquidation. Exchange-traded fund flows also showed $536 million in daily outflows, marking four red days in five.
Economist Peter Schiff joined the bearish camp, arguing that Bitcoin has lost 34% of its value against gold since its peak.
“The idea of Bitcoin as digital gold has failed,” Schiff said, calling this phase “the beginning of a brutal decline.”
Andrew Tate Predicts Pain Before the Peak
Andrew Tate, a controversial influencer and former kickboxing world champion, predicted that Bitcoin could plunge to what he described as the September 2023 level of $26,000 before staging a major rebound.
He argued that traders’ “blind optimism” was keeping the market from finding a true bottom.
In his post, Tate delivered a vivid monologue to his millions of followers, warning that “everything can always get worse.” His central message was clear: “the price can always go lower.”
Tate’s tone was blunt and pessimistic, consistent with his reputation. The former athlete has faced multiple criminal charges in Romania, including rape, human trafficking, and money laundering—allegations he denies.
Despite his legal troubles, Tate remains highly influential online, promoting what he calls a “war room” philosophy centered on wealth and dominance, often through crypto speculation.
He claimed that the market would only recover once “everybody has lost all their money,” calling that moment the true start of a new bull cycle.
Hayes’ optimism and Tate’s pessimism represent two poles of sentiment in a market caught between fear and opportunity.
Whether Bitcoin rebounds or sinks further, the contrast between rational accumulation and apocalyptic bravado highlights the psychological extremes shaping today’s crypto trading narrative.
The post Arthur Hayes Calls Bitcoin Buy as Andrew Tate Predicts Collapse appeared first on BeInCrypto.