Mark Cuban has dumped most of his Bitcoin, calling it “not the hedge I expected” as the Iran war and dollar volatility exposed what he sees as a failed safe haven narrative.
Summary
Billionaire investor Mark Cuban has revealed he sold the majority of his Bitcoin holdings, declaring that the flagship cryptocurrency “has lost the plot” and “is not the hedge I expected” against war and inflation.
Speaking on the Portfolio Players podcast with Front Office Sports, Cuban said he offloaded roughly 80% of his BTC after watching gold rip to $5,000 during the U.S.–Iran conflict while Bitcoin dropped instead of behaving like “a better version of gold.”
“I always thought it was a better version of gold than gold,” Cuban said. “But gold just blew up and went to $5,000. Bitcoin dropped.”
“This might get some people upset,” he added. “I think Bitcoin has lost the plot.”
Cuban’s hedge thesis breaks, but the data fights back
Cuban framed his exit explicitly as a verdict on Bitcoin’s failure as a hedge during geopolitical stress and dollar weakness, pointing to the Iran war as the turning point. He argued that when “fiat is getting hit and there’s geopolitical turmoil,” Bitcoin should behave like a crisis asset, yet in his view “the hedging effect never materialized” while gold surged.
The timing is awkward. Since the start of the 2026 Iran war on February 28, Bitcoin has actually outperformed gold by roughly 35–36% on a relative basis, with BTC up about 7–10% while gold has been flat to down and the BTC/gold ratio has surged. separate analysis cited by Yahoo Finance noted that Bitcoin has gained more than 16% over the conflict period even as gold prices have declined by over 15%, undercutting Cuban’s claim that BTC “failed” as a hedge in aggregate.
At the time of Cuban’s comments, Bitcoin was trading near $77,500, down roughly 38% from its October 2025 all time high of $126,080 but still well above its pre war levels; gold, meanwhile, had pulled back to around $4,500 per ounce after briefly touching $5,000.
What about Bitcoin price
According to the Bitcoin (BTC) price page from crypto.news, BTC recently hovered in the mid $70,000s, reinforcing that the asset has recovered sharply from early conflict lows even if it remains below its peak.
Cuban’s own positioning underscores the reversal. Heading into 2026, he said his crypto portfolio was roughly 60% Bitcoin, 30% Ethereum and 10% other tokens, a structure he previously justified by calling BTC “a better store of value asset than gold.”
Now he says he still holds Ethereum for its “utility” while dismissing most altcoins as “junk,” effectively recasting Bitcoin as the disappointment in a portfolio he once described as anchored by BTC.
War, inflation and the safe haven narrative
The clash between Cuban’s experience and the data comes as the broader market reassesses what, exactly, Bitcoin hedges.
As crypto.news has previously reported in its coverage of how Bitcoin outperforms gold by roughly 36% since the Iran war began, BTC has behaved less like a classic “panic bid” asset and more like a high beta macro instrument that still managed to beat traditional havens over the war’s first months.
In its own report on Cuban’s remarks, crypto.news noted that “Bitcoin defenders” argue the billionaire cherry picked the worst window: BTC did sell off on initial Iran headlines, but from the first signs of conflict it has risen more than 16%, while gold has sagged.
Fortune similarly observed that “since the start of the war, the original cryptocurrency is up about 7%, and on Wednesday was trading at around $71,000,” even as gold drifted near $5,240 per ounce.
Cuban’s broader skepticism comes after years of vocal support, including a 2021 podcast appearance where he revealed that 60% of his crypto holdings were in Bitcoin and insisted he would “never sell it for anything” because it was superior to gold as a store of value.
With that stance now reversed, his sale has become a Rorschach test for the market: either a high profile confirmation that the “digital gold” story is broken, or, as some traders suggest and as earlier crypto.news coverage of Bitcoin’s performance during crises implies, an exquisitely mistimed capitulation top in a still evolving hedge narrative.
Other crypto.news reporting on war driven flows into gold tokenization and renewed institutional interest in Ethereum suggests that the safe haven debate is fragmenting across assets rather than converging on a single “digital bunker.”
For now, Cuban’s verdict is blunt: Bitcoin, he says, “lost the plot” – even as the numbers stubbornly refuse to give him the clean failure he thinks he saw in real time.





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