Russell 2000 Breakout Rekindles Bitcoin Bull Run Narrative
The post Russell 2000 Breakout Rekindles Bitcoin Bull Run Narrative appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Bitcoin traded below a global money supply based “equilibrium” line in a chart shared by GordonGekko, while another post linked a fresh Russell 2000 breakout to past BTC rallies. Together, the charts revived a familiar cycle narrative, even though neither post gave a firm target or timeline. Bitcoin trails global money supply line as trader flags “undershooting” gap A chart shared on X by GordonGekko shows Bitcoin trading below an estimated “equilibrium” price tied to global money supply, framing the current level as an undershoot relative to the model. Bitcoin vs Global Money Supply Cointegration Implied Equilibrium. Source: Bloomberg,Bitwise Europe The graphic, labeled “Bitcoin vs Global Money Supply: Cointegration Implied Equilibrium,” plots BTC’s market price against a dotted equilibrium line on a log scale from the early 2010s through 2025. In the latest segment, the green BTC line sits under the dotted series, indicating a negative gap versus the model’s implied level. In addition, a lower panel labeled “Mispricing (%)” shows the spread between Bitcoin and the equilibrium estimate. The most recent readings dip below zero, signaling Bitcoin trading under the implied benchmark rather than above it, based on the chart. In his post, GordonGekko called the setup “Bitcoin & Global Money Supply” and wrote, “It is obvious what happens next,” adding that “Sellers will live in deep regret for the next 12 months.” The post did not include a specific price target or timing beyond that statement. The chart cites Bloomberg and Bitwise Europe as sources. Russell 2000 breakout post revives “Bitcoin bull run” link on X Meanwhile, a post on X by AO, who uses the handle AO_btc_analyst, claimed that Bitcoin bull runs have followed past breakouts in the iShares Russell 2000 ETF and said the small cap benchmark has now broken out again. iShares Russell 2000 ETF.…
Filed under: News - @ December 31, 2025 11:28 am