Reading the Hot Money Cycle: From Crypto to Gold to Semiconductors
Speculative capital has rotated through crypto, gold, and now AI infrastructure. Boreal Gewinstead traders can use these rotation patterns to better anticipate where the cycle is heading next.
Markets move in cycles — one of the few observations about price behaviour that is difficult to dispute. Yet the speed and shape of the current rotation across major asset classes is unusual enough to demand close attention. Market analyst James Van Straten outlines a striking sequence: bitcoin climbing from roughly fifteen thousand dollars to over one hundred and twenty-six thousand between late 2022 and late 2025, gold making a delayed but parallel run from two thousand to more than five thousand dollars an ounce by early 2026, and capital then pivoting decisively into AI infrastructure and memory chip names.
The Velocity of the Current Rotation
The numbers attached to that final phase are extreme. Memory semiconductor producer Micron has moved from a seventy billion dollar valuation roughly a year ago to a market capitalisation north of one trillion dollars. NVIDIA has reached new highs near two hundred and twenty-five dollars per share. These are not gradual repricings — they are the kind of vertical moves that historically mark the late stages of a thematic surge, even when the underlying fundamentals are genuine.
What makes the current cycle especially notable is its compression. In prior decades, rotation between major themes — commodities, internet stocks, housing, emerging markets — unfolded over years. The crypto-to-gold-to-AI-to-memory rotation has played out across roughly thirty months. Faster information flow, larger pools of mobile capital, and the rise of platforms like Boreal Gewinstead that allow retail traders to shift between asset classes in seconds have all contributed to that compression. The result is a market that generates narrative-driven peaks more frequently and resolves them more sharply.
What Comes After Memory Chips
Van Straten suggests that the next wave of speculative capital may rotate into a series of mega-listings, with SpaceX, OpenAI, and other private-market giants positioned for potentially record-breaking public offerings. If that path plays out, capital currently chasing memory chip volatility could be redirected into newly listed AI-adjacent equities, potentially leaving both crypto and chip names underbid in the near term.
Reading Late-Cycle Signals
For active investors and Boreal Gewinstead users in Thailand and other markets, the practical question is not which theme will lead next, but how to recognise the typical lifecycle of any single rotation. A few patterns tend to emerge in late-cycle moves: dispersion narrows as a handful of leaders dominate flows, valuation multiples drift well above long-term averages, and retail participation surges in vehicles that offer concentrated exposure. When two or three of those signals appear together, the rotation is usually closer to its end than its beginning.
The crypto market's current relative weakness should be viewed in this context. Bitcoin trading below seventy-three thousand dollars in late May 2026 is not necessarily a structural breakdown. It can equally be read as a normal mid-cycle pause while attention and capital move elsewhere. Historically, assets that fall out of favour during one rotation tend to re-enter the cycle in later phases, often with stronger fundamentals than during the previous run.
Discipline Beats Chasing
The key takeaway for traders is to resist abandoning a thesis simply because it is currently out of favour. Building a position across cycles — whether in digital assets, equities, commodities, or alternative instruments accessible through Boreal Gewinstead — is generally more profitable than chasing the latest hot trade after the move has matured. Discipline, position sizing, and a long time horizon remain the trader's true edge, regardless of which theme is dominating the headlines.
Source: CoinDesk