Why Bitcoin is touching $80,000 while capital rotates to Hong Kong’s AI IPO boom
by By Ruqia Shahid · The News InternationalBitcoin is struggling to maintain momentum above the $80,000 psychological barrier, as a stark divide emerges between Western buying and Asian selling.
According to recent market data, the digital asset is entering the Hong Kong trading day under pressure, treating $80,000 as a ceiling rather than a launchpad.
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Data from Presto Research highlights a growing trend while US and European sessions have driven recent gains, Asian trading hours have consistently acted as a drag on returns.
This cooling sentiment is most visible in Hong Kong’s spot Bitcoin ETFs, which have gone effectively dormant.
“If Asian participation stays absent, any sustained push above $80K requires European and US sessions to keep carrying the load without the overnight liquidity buffer Asia normally provides,” Enflux wrote.
Net assets sit at $319.48 million, with daily turnover frequently dipping below $2 million. Regional capital appears to be rotating out of digital assets and into traditional equities. Hong Kong’s IPO market recorded its strongest first quarter in five years, raising HK$110 billion.
Investors are flocking to Mainland China AI and technology listings. With over 400 IPO applications in the pipeline, the Hong Kong exchange is effectively booked for the year, draining the liquidity that previously fueled Bitcoin’s April rally.
The technical outlook is similarly cautious as Glassnode reports that Bitcoin is currently stuck just below the $80,700 “short-term holder realized price”, a critical on-chain level that has flipped from support to resistance.
The “spot cumulative volume delta” dropped nearly 29% suggesting that aggressive buyers have retreated to the sidelines. All eyes are now on Friday’s US payrolls report; that a strong employment print could provide the “Western flow” necessary to break the current resistance.
Conversely, a miss could leave Bitcoin vulnerable to a deeper correction without a global support base to catch the fall.