Massive capital inflows into Treasurys and gold are laying the groundwork for Bitcoin (BTC) to surge. Last week, U.S. Treasury funds recorded a $19 billion net inflow, surpassing the 2020 pandemic peak ($14 billion), while gold's share of global reserves jumped to 18% — a 26-year high. With foreign central banks cutting U.S. debt holdings to the lowest level in 22 years, Bitcoin is benefiting from the global de-dollarization trend. In 2023, as U.S. yields rose amid recession fears, Bitcoin surged 47% in one month while the Nasdaq dropped 8.7%. Now, with falling yields, improving liquidity, and a global rush into gold, Bitcoin could be poised for another powerful rally led by institutional capital.