Can Bitcoin Break Conference Curse at This Week's Las Vegas Event?
Bitcoin has been on a heater over the past few weeks, but previous years' conferences have proven to be decent selling opportunities.

What to know:
- As has been the case for a few years, much is expected in the way of announcements at the annual Bitcoin Conference, this year taking place in Las Vegas.
- Historically, though, BTC has tended to decline in at least the near-term aftermath of these conferences.
- With rising institutional interest, market sentiment is cautiously hopeful that 2025 breaks the pattern.
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Historical data compiled by Galaxy Research across five prior conferences from San Francisco in 2019 to Nashville in 2024 reveals that bitcoin has generally fared poorly both during and especially after these gatherings.
For example, the 2019 event saw a 10% decline during the conference and BTC went on to tumble 24% over the following month. The 2022 conference in Miami showed a similar trajectory: down 1% during the event and a steep 29% slide in the month after. Both of those instances, however, occurred in the middle of bear markets.
Even in bull market years like 2023, though, price action remained flat or slightly negative.
The most recent 2024 conference in Nashville in July — which featured then-presidential candidate Donald Trump promising a strategic bitcoin reserve — posted a 4% gain during the event, but a fast 20% decline shortly after, coinciding with the unwinding of the yen carry trade that triggered a broader risk-off move across global markets.
The setup this year — which is set to feature current Vice President J.D. Vance — could be materially different as institutional engagement is rising. Still, with historical data stacked against it, bitcoin faces a psychological hurdle as much as a technical one. Conference weeks have become sell-the-news moments.

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What to know:
- Fundstrat's Thomas Lee urged investors to view the sell-off as a buying opportunity, arguing that gold has likely peaked for the year and that bitcoin and ether are poised to outperform
- Lee sees ether possibly needing a brief dip below $1,800 before a sustained recovery.
- Bitcoin fell back below $67,000 on Wednesday, extending a pullback from last week's rebound and marking a roughly 50 percent drawdown from its October record highs.











