Investors have recently been proposing a few bad arguments for selling Bitcoin.
Those arguments typically combine a grain of truth with a misunderstanding.
If you do decide to sell, make sure it's not for these reasons.
When markets get turbulent, sometimes investors grasp at whichever actions make them feel as if they're in control. With Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC), that often means having the urge to hit the sell button the moment the price wiggles the wrong way. The problem is that the most common reasons people give for selling an asset like Bitcoin are usually about feelings, not fundamentals.
If your plan is to profit by buying and holding crypto's leading asset, you cannot let short-term jitters derail the long-term investment thesis. Let's look at three popular (and weak) reasons for selling.
Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now, when you join Stock Advisor. See the stocks »
Image source: Getty Images.
Investors tend to worry a lot about whether the price will decline in the near term. It might. It might also rise. Or it could bounce around.
The fix here is to have a longer time horizon. Years from now, you probably won't care about today's price action.
Bitcoin's supply schedule means that fewer and fewer coins are mined over time, which, in the long run, generates scarcity that biases prices to the upside. Scarcity does not guarantee higher prices next week. But it does tighten the spigot over a multiyear time frame.
If you zoom out to five-year periods, Bitcoin has historically trounced most major asset classes on total return, which is the relevant horizon for a long-term allocation. So don't worry about the price tomorrow; plan for how to take advantage of whatever happens.
The "Magnificent Seven" group of stocks has performed quite well during the past few years. In fact, it has performed so well that some people are selling their Bitcoin to buy members of that group.
But performance-chasing is a bad habit, not a strategy. In 2025, leadership among the Magnificent Seven was uneven from business to business, with spectacular surges and sharp declines clustered just months apart. Investors added more than $1.5 trillion of value to the cohort on April 9 after tariff headlines shifted, then several names lagged in subsequent months as valuation and capital expenditure concerns bit. This is to say that if you're only focused on the price going up, it's very possible to buy assets at the most expensive time to do so.
Swapping Bitcoin for whatever just rallied risks selling low and buying high. Don't be impulsive like that. If your investment thesis for Bitcoin is about a scarce digital asset with global settlement and a fixed supply, chasing a totally different equity factor exposure because it feels safer or more exciting is an error.
The better approach is to size your crypto positions so you can hold through both tech stock rotations and crypto volatility, not ping-pong between them whenever headlines change.
Some investors claim that financial institutions buying large sums of Bitcoin is proof that there's simply not much upside left in it.
This idea confuses two separate concepts, specifically volatility and value. It is true that the arrival of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and more corporate holders has changed the market's plumbing as well as its character. But the evidence so far suggests that broader access via ETFs may damp some volatility at the margin without actually negatively affecting performance.
Meanwhile, ETF and balance sheet demand from digital asset treasury (DAT) companies that buy and hold crypto takes circulating coins off the market, shrinking the float available for public trading and raising the hurdle for new buyers. Furthermore, major asset managers expect digital assets to entrench rather than vanish as institutional adoption broadens, even if price swings persist. The upshot of that happening is a market with deeper pockets and fewer loose coins.
And all of that is a recipe for demand meeting slowing supply growth such that the price is more likely to rise than to fall over the long term -- which is the same situation as always for Bitcoin.
Before you buy stock in Bitcoin, consider this:
The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Bitcoin wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.
Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $599,784!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,165,716!*
Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 1,035% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 191% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.
See the 10 stocks »
*Stock Advisor returns as of November 10, 2025
Alex Carchidi has positions in Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.