For years, the market has learned to treat Bitcoin cycles as something almost predictable.
Halving, acceleration, euphoria, top.
But this cycle broke that logic — and it wasn’t in the price, it was in the structure.
Not only did the price behavior change; the market mechanics changed. The flow changed, the dominant agent changed, the macro changed. That’s why analyzing 2025 through the lenses of 2017 or 2021 can lead to dangerous conclusions.
What made previous cycles “similar”
The cycles of 2012, 2016, and 2020 shared a similar macro and micro foundation.
These elements created a highly favorable environment for rapid movements and speculative excesses:
Near-zero or falling interest rates
Abundant liquidity
Low institutional participation
Price action mainly driven by retail
Accelerated euphoria post-halving
Relatively more liquid supply
Derivatives still not dominant
In this environment, halving had a direct and quick impact on the price. Historically, the ATH emerged, on average, about 500 days after the event, with increasing delays as the market matured.
The most striking difference: high interest rates at halving
For the first time in Bitcoin history, a halving occurred under positive real interest rates.
In previous cycles, real interest rates at the time of halving were approximately:
2012: ≈ -1.9%
2016: ≈ -0.5%
2020: ≈ -1.0%
This scenario favored risk assets: cheap money, high liquidity, and a widespread search for returns.
In 2024–2025, the context is the opposite:
Positive real interest rates
More restricted liquidity
Controlled but persistent inflation
Lower risk appetite
Institutional purchases more gradual and rational
If historically ATHs occurred with negative real interest rates, this single factor already suggests a slower cycle and possibly a delayed timing.
The entry of institutions completely changed the mechanics (data)
Previously, Bitcoin was dominated by retail: volatile, emotional, and subject to parabolic movements.
Today, the structure is different:
Spot Bitcoin ETFs accumulate hundreds of billions of dollars in assets under management and have absorbed, since launch, about 4% to 5% of the circulating supply.
The average daily ETF purchases in various periods of 2024–2025 exceeded the net issuance post-halving (≈450 BTC/day), creating a structural supply deficit.
Hedge funds treat BTC as a macro asset, correlating it with real interest rates, the dollar, and global liquidity.
The options market now directly influences price zones and implied volatility.
This new balance reduces:
Extreme volatility peaks
Retail speculative manias
Classic parabolic movements
And creates a heavier, more continuous, and institutionally flow-driven upward trend, not driven by immediate euphoria.
ETFs as the main driver of the rally (quantification)
Much of Bitcoin’s appreciation in 2024 occurred before the halving.
In this cycle, the main initial catalyst was not the supply reduction caused by halving, but the structural flow of Bitcoin spot ETFs, amplified by a significant change in the U.S. political scenario, which altered regulatory and flow expectations.
Quantitatively:
At various times, ETFs bought 2x to 4x the amount of BTC issued daily by miners.
In monthly windows, ETF net flows were enough to fully absorb miner selling pressure and even withdraw liquidity from exchanges.
This explains why BTC managed to rise even in an environment of high interest rates: demand came from structural portfolio allocation, not cheap liquidity.
This dynamic did not exist in any previous cycle.
Extremely illiquid supply (on-chain)
The current cycle presents the most restrictive supply conditions in Bitcoin history:
BTC balance on exchanges at the lowest levels since 2018, below 12% of total supply.
Over 70% of the supply has not moved in at least 1 year, a historical record.
Long-term holders (LTHs) maintain a positive net position even after new highs.
Miners, after strong capitulation in previous cycles, now operate with greater efficiency and less forced selling.
In past cycles, the rally quickly attracted BTC to exchanges.
In this cycle, the opposite occurs: ETFs and institutional custody continuously drain liquidity.
The current macro environment is unlike any other cycle
Previous cycles occurred in environments of:
Low interest rates
Contained inflation
Controlled fiscal deficits
Less geopolitical influence
Today, the scenario includes:
Elevated interest rates
Historically high fiscal deficits
Moderate but persistent inflation
Reindustrialization, reshoring, and geopolitical fragmentation
Central banks dealing with structurally higher debt levels
It’s an unprecedented macro regime for Bitcoin.
The true ATH of this cycle has not yet arrived
Based on:
The history of ATHs occurring in low or negative real interest rate environments
The structural delay caused by a halving under positive real interest rates
The measurable impact of spot ETFs
The historically illiquid supply level
The expectation of an interest rate cut cycle conditioned on inflation and growth
The normalization of volatility driven by institutional activity via derivatives
The central thesis:
👉 Historically, Bitcoin cycle tops occurred in environments of higher risk appetite, often associated with negative real interest rates (a zone close to -0.8%).
This reference should not be seen as an exact trigger, but as a historical region observed in previous cycles, despite broad dispersion.
Currently, real interest rates remain positive, near 1.9%, which helps explain the absence of typical top euphoria.
If previous cycles needed this environment…
and this one has not yet experienced it…
then it makes sense to consider that the current cycle has not ended — it is structurally delayed.
Quantitative box — How previous cycle tops formed vs the current cycle
Real interest rates: negative ❌ | currently positive ✅
Realized volatility: high ❌ | compressed ✅
BTC on exchanges: high ❌ | historic low ✅
Institutional demand: marginal ❌ | structural via ETFs ✅
Limitations and statistical caution
Bitcoin still has only three complete cycles, which limits robust statistical inferences.
However, the recurrence of macro conditions at previous tops suggests that the relationship between real interest rates, liquidity, and all-time highs is not random but structural.
Conclusion
This Bitcoin cycle is not an extended version of previous ones.
It has a different structure, macro environment, demand profile, and price profile.
It is the most institutional, most illiquid, and most interest rate-sensitive cycle in history.
And, precisely because of that, it may be the first time the true all-time high emerges after most of the market has already declared that the top is behind us.
👉 If the macro conditions that historically marked tops have not yet appeared, does it make sense to treat this movement as the end of the cycle — or just its halfway point?
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Why is this Bitcoin cycle completely different from the previous ones?
For years, the market has learned to treat Bitcoin cycles as something almost predictable.
Halving, acceleration, euphoria, top.
But this cycle broke that logic — and it wasn’t in the price, it was in the structure.
Not only did the price behavior change; the market mechanics changed. The flow changed, the dominant agent changed, the macro changed. That’s why analyzing 2025 through the lenses of 2017 or 2021 can lead to dangerous conclusions.
What made previous cycles “similar”
The cycles of 2012, 2016, and 2020 shared a similar macro and micro foundation.
These elements created a highly favorable environment for rapid movements and speculative excesses:
In this environment, halving had a direct and quick impact on the price. Historically, the ATH emerged, on average, about 500 days after the event, with increasing delays as the market matured.
The most striking difference: high interest rates at halving
For the first time in Bitcoin history, a halving occurred under positive real interest rates. In previous cycles, real interest rates at the time of halving were approximately:
This scenario favored risk assets: cheap money, high liquidity, and a widespread search for returns. In 2024–2025, the context is the opposite:
If historically ATHs occurred with negative real interest rates, this single factor already suggests a slower cycle and possibly a delayed timing.
The entry of institutions completely changed the mechanics (data)
Previously, Bitcoin was dominated by retail: volatile, emotional, and subject to parabolic movements. Today, the structure is different:
This new balance reduces:
And creates a heavier, more continuous, and institutionally flow-driven upward trend, not driven by immediate euphoria.
ETFs as the main driver of the rally (quantification)
Much of Bitcoin’s appreciation in 2024 occurred before the halving. In this cycle, the main initial catalyst was not the supply reduction caused by halving, but the structural flow of Bitcoin spot ETFs, amplified by a significant change in the U.S. political scenario, which altered regulatory and flow expectations.
Quantitatively:
This explains why BTC managed to rise even in an environment of high interest rates: demand came from structural portfolio allocation, not cheap liquidity. This dynamic did not exist in any previous cycle.
Extremely illiquid supply (on-chain)
The current cycle presents the most restrictive supply conditions in Bitcoin history:
In past cycles, the rally quickly attracted BTC to exchanges. In this cycle, the opposite occurs: ETFs and institutional custody continuously drain liquidity.
The current macro environment is unlike any other cycle
Previous cycles occurred in environments of:
Today, the scenario includes:
It’s an unprecedented macro regime for Bitcoin.
The true ATH of this cycle has not yet arrived
Based on:
The central thesis:
👉 Historically, Bitcoin cycle tops occurred in environments of higher risk appetite, often associated with negative real interest rates (a zone close to -0.8%). This reference should not be seen as an exact trigger, but as a historical region observed in previous cycles, despite broad dispersion. Currently, real interest rates remain positive, near 1.9%, which helps explain the absence of typical top euphoria. If previous cycles needed this environment… and this one has not yet experienced it… then it makes sense to consider that the current cycle has not ended — it is structurally delayed.
Quantitative box — How previous cycle tops formed vs the current cycle
Limitations and statistical caution
Bitcoin still has only three complete cycles, which limits robust statistical inferences. However, the recurrence of macro conditions at previous tops suggests that the relationship between real interest rates, liquidity, and all-time highs is not random but structural.
Conclusion
This Bitcoin cycle is not an extended version of previous ones. It has a different structure, macro environment, demand profile, and price profile. It is the most institutional, most illiquid, and most interest rate-sensitive cycle in history. And, precisely because of that, it may be the first time the true all-time high emerges after most of the market has already declared that the top is behind us.
👉 If the macro conditions that historically marked tops have not yet appeared, does it make sense to treat this movement as the end of the cycle — or just its halfway point?