A new theory circulating in the crypto market challenges the way investors interpret Bitcoin’s recent price drop. In a post shared on
A ‘parallel financial layer’
Rover’s central claim is that while Bitcoin’s supply limit on the 21 million coin chain has not changed, the way Bitcoin is traded in modern financial markets has effectively reduced its scarcity.
According to According to him, focusing solely on spot buying and selling ignores what’s really driving price action today. BTC, he says, no longer moves primarily based on physical ownership of coins, but based on activity in massive derivatives markets that now dominate price discovery.
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As the analyst highlighted, Bitcoin’s valuation in its early years rested on two fundamental principles: a strictly fixed supply of 21 million coins and the impossibility of duplicating that supply.
These characteristics made Bitcoin uniquely scarce, with prices largely determined by real buyers and sellers exchanging coins in the world spot market. However, Rover claims that over time a ‘parallel financial layer’ has emerged on top of the blockchain itself.
This financial layer includes cash-settled futures, perpetual swaps, options contracts, prime brokerage loans, packaged Bitcoin products such as WBTC, and total return swaps.
None of these instruments create new Bitcoin on the blockchain, but they do create synthetic exposure to the price of Bitcoin. According to Rover, this synthetic exposure now plays a central role in determining how Bitcoin trades.
If trading volumes in derivatives grew and eventually surpassed spot market activity, Rover argues that Bitcoin’s price no longer primarily responded to on-chain currency movements.
Instead, prices increasingly reflect leverage, trader positioning, margin stress and liquidation dynamics. In practical terms, this means that Bitcoin can move sharply even when few real coins are being bought or sold.
Why Bitcoin Moves Without Spot Selling
Rover also emphasizes the concept of synthetic offerings, explaining that a single Bitcoin can now be used for multiple financial products simultaneously.
One coin can make a exchange traded fund (ETF) stock while simultaneously supporting a futures contract, a perpetual swap hedge, options exposure, a broker loan, or a structured investment product.
While this doesn’t increase the actual supply of Bitcoin, it does dramatically increase the amount of tradable exposure associated with that same coin. When this synthetic exposure increases compared to Bitcoin’s real supply, the market’s perception of scarcity weakens.
This phenomenon, often described as synthetic float expansion, changes the way prices behave. Rallies are easier to shorten using derivatives, debt levels are increasing rapidly, liquidations are becoming more common and volatility is increasing.
According to Rover, this structural shift causes price movements to be disconnected from the fundamental factors in the chain. Still, the analyst notes that the leading cryptocurrency is not unique in this regard.
Similar transitions occurred in markets such as gold, silver, oil and major stock indices. At least once derivatives markets Physical trading was increasingly influenced by financial positioning.
This framework also helps explain why Bitcoin sometimes falls even when there are no major spot sales. Price pressure can come from forced liquidations of leveraged long positions, aggressive shorting of futures positions, options hedging, or ETF arbitrage trades.
Importantly, Rover emphasizes that Bitcoin’s hard cap at the protocol level has not changed. The 21 million limit remains intact on the blockchain.
What has changed, he argues, is the financial structure surrounding Bitcoin. He concluded his analysis by claiming that “paper Bitcoin” has become more influential than physical property in today’s markets, and that dominance plays a key role in the market’s recent instability.
Featured image of DALL-E, chart from TradingView.com
