Eric Balchunas, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg, has warned that the recent surge in Zcash (ZEC) could have negative implications for Bitcoin (BTC), particularly at a time when unified support for Bitcoin is seen as crucial.
LATEST: ⚡️ Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas says that the recent explosion in enthusiasm for Zcash has "third-party candidate vibes" and risks splitting support away from Bitcoin at a crucial moment. pic.twitter.com/jivaDYn7wl
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In a recent post on X, Balchunas compared the Zcash movement to the emergence of a third-party candidate in a U.S. presidential election, which is a force that doesn’t win outright but splits the vote and weakens the leading contender.
He argued that promoting another privacy-focused cryptocurrency during a pivotal moment for Bitcoin’s cultural and political consolidation risks diluting BTC’s narrative and momentum.
Industry Figures Push Back on Claims of a Shift Toward Zcash
Balchunas’s comments arrive amid intensifying debate over whether Zcash is gaining meaningful traction at Bitcoin’s expense.
Arman Megherian, founder and CEO of Timestamp, dismissed the idea that Bitcoin supporters are migrating to Zcash. Similarly, JAN3 CEO Samson Mow rejected suggestions that Zcash is experiencing an organic wave of adoption, noting that some in the industry suspect the surge in attention may be manufactured rather than market-driven.
Concerns intensified after venture capitalist Mark Moss released an image showing that a marketing agency had approached him with a paid collaboration proposal involving Zcash, fueling speculation that promotional efforts may be coordinated.
Adding to skepticism, market analyst Rajat Soni argued that the recent hype around ZEC appears more like an attempt by major holders to secure exit liquidity rather than evidence of genuine demand.
Despite the noise, Zcash continues to draw elevated visibility across social platforms and crypto communities, heightening the debate over whether its resurgence is temporary marketing turbulence or a meaningful shift in investor behavior.