Retail investors are shifting from crypto to equities after a $19 billion October crash, with Bitcoin down nearly 50%.
Retail investors are stepping back from crypto markets and shifting funds into equities, according to a Wintermute report citing JPMorgan data.
The move accelerated after October’s crash wiped out over $19 billion in positions. Bitcoin has fallen nearly 50% from its peak, while equity indexes continue to attract fresh retail participation and capital inflows.
Retail Capital Rotates Toward Equities
Wintermute said retail risk appetite once centered on crypto markets. Now, that appetite appears spread across equities and thematic trades.
The firm described crypto as “one of many risky-asset classes with similar volatility profiles that retail can use to invest and speculate on.”
The October crash marked a turning point. Over 1.6 million traders were liquidated during the selloff, based on Coinglass data.
Since then, Wintermute reported “a near-complete pivot into equities that is still ongoing.” Equity funds continue to record inflows.
Over the past three months, nearly $3 billion left spot-Bitcoin ETFs, according to Bloomberg data.
For years, retail investors were crypto’s most reliable fuel — the dip-buyers, the memecoin speculators, the momentum traders that powered every rally. Now they’re moving on. https://t.co/e3znrFYfdH
— Bloomberg (@business) March 1, 2026
In contrast, gold-themed ETFs attracted more than $20 billion during the same period.
Cosmo Jiang, a portfolio manager at Pantera Capital, pointed to similar patterns. “You can see this in monthly ETF data into some of the most recent hyped-up assets,” he said.
He added that outflows in Bitcoin and Ether coincided with inflows into gold, silver, and thematic equity funds.
Volatility Gap Narrows Between Crypto and Stocks
Crypto markets once offered wider price swings than traditional assets. That volatility drew retail traders seeking rapid gains.
However, the gap between crypto and equities has narrowed. Wintermute reported that Bitcoin’s realized volatility ratio relative to the Nasdaq has been trending lower.
At times in early 2025, it fell below two times the Nasdaq level. For short-term traders, the difference in potential price moves has reduced.
As volatility compresses, equities present similar trading opportunities. Stocks also offer earnings data and analyst coverage. These tools provide frameworks that some retail investors view as helpful.
— Wintermute (@wintermute_t) February 26, 2026
Wintermute stated on social platform X that “heightened retail activity in equities is pulling air out of crypto.”
The firm linked this activity to broader access to stock analysis tools, including AI-based screening platforms.
Related Reading: Crypto Market Struggles as Bitcoin and Ethereum Post Weak Q1 2026 Performance
Structural Challenges for Crypto Markets
Crypto differs from equities in its market structure. Stocks are supported by earnings, dividends, and institutional mandates.
Digital assets depend more heavily on investor demand and market sentiment. Retail participation has historically supplied much of that demand.
When retail flows weaken, trading volumes and price momentum can slow. The current rotation raises questions about the strength of crypto’s recovery path.
Industry participants note that the investable universe in crypto continues to expand. New tokens launch frequently, and valuation methods vary. This environment can make comparisons and research more complex for individual traders.
Jiang said, “The only sustainable path forward for the industry has always been building products and launching tokens with real fundamentals.”
As retail investors explore equities and thematic ETFs, crypto markets face a period of adjustment shaped by shifting capital flows.
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