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Grey Jabesi • 22 January 2026
No Adverts are availableIn the fast-paced world of cryptocurrency, it is often said that a week is a lifetime. Yet, for all its focus on the future, the crypto market is deeply cyclical, haunted by the ghosts of bull runs and bear markets past. The current market turmoil of early 2026, with its potent cocktail of geopolitical tension, institutional deleveraging, and a crisis of narrative, is not without precedent. By examining the dramatic crypto cycle of 2025, we can uncover a powerful set of lessons about the forces that truly drive this market, and in doing so, better understand the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead.
The year 2025 was a tale of two markets. It began with the euphoric "Liberation Day" rally in April, which saw Bitcoin decouple from a struggling stock market and embark on a powerful six-month run to a new all-time high of $126,000. It ended with a brutal, grinding deleveraging in the fourth quarter that erased a significant portion of those gains and left the "digital gold" narrative in tatters. This boom-and-bust cycle, compressed into a single year, offers a perfect case study in the mechanics of modern crypto markets.
This article provides a historical analysis of the 2025 crypto cycle, dissecting the key factors that fueled the rally and triggered the subsequent crash. By understanding how the market reacted to the trends of leverage, institutional adoption, and shifting macroeconomic narratives in the recent past, we can draw crucial parallels to the current situation and gain a clearer perspective on what to expect in 2026.
The Anatomy of a Supercycle: The 2025 Rally
The rally that began in the spring of 2025 was, for a time, a vindication of the core crypto narrative. As traditional markets struggled with inflation fears and rising interest rates, Bitcoin appeared to be a genuine safe haven. The rally was kicked off by what became known as the "Liberation Day" rally, where Bitcoin's price action decoupled from the S&P 500 and began to climb steadily.
However, beneath the surface of this narrative-driven rally, a more powerful mechanical force was at play: leverage. The primary engine of the 2025 bull run was not a sudden influx of long-term, spot-buying holders. It was a massive expansion of USD-settled derivatives.
According to a detailed analysis by BloFin Research, the period from March to October 2025 saw open interest in Bitcoin derivatives more than double, from approximately $46 billion to over $92 billion [1]. This flood of leveraged money acted as a powerful afterburner, amplifying buying pressure and propelling Bitcoin to its October high of $126,000.
Time Period | Key Event | Bitcoin Price Action | Key Driver |
Q2 2025 | "Liberation Day" Rally | Begins steady climb | Narrative of decoupling, initial leverage build-up |
Q3 2025 | Continued Bull Run | Accelerates towards peak | Massive expansion of USD-settled derivatives |
Q4 2025 | The Great Deleveraging | Sharp decline from peak | Institutional de-risking, leverage unwind |
Table 4: The 2025 Bitcoin Price Cycle. Source: [1]
The Inevitable Unwind: The Q4 2025 Deleveraging
What leverage gives, leverage can take away. The same forces that created the spectacular rally in the summer of 2025 were responsible for the painful crash in the final quarter of the year. As the macroeconomic picture darkened and institutional risk appetite began to wane, the leveraged positions that had fueled the ascent began to unwind.
The institutionalization of Bitcoin meant that it was now part of a broader portfolio management strategy. When it came time for large funds to reduce their overall risk exposure, the high-volatility, highly-leveraged Bitcoin positions were among the first to be cut. This created a cascade of selling pressure, which was then amplified by the very leverage that had driven the market up. Margin calls and forced liquidations created a vicious downward spiral.
During this period, the divergence between Bitcoin and gold became starkly apparent. While Bitcoin was caught in a deleveraging vortex, gold, which is a much less leveraged market, began to grind higher, ending the year with a 65-70% gain [1]. This demonstrated that in a true risk-off environment, institutional capital still prefers the stability of physical assets over the volatility of digital ones.
Lessons for 2026: History Rhymes
The events of 2025 provide a crucial lens through which to view the current market environment. The parallels are striking:
Geopolitical Shocks as a Catalyst: The 2025 deleveraging was triggered by a general shift in macroeconomic sentiment. The 2026 sell-off was sparked by a specific geopolitical event—Trump's tariff threats—but the underlying mechanism is the same. Geopolitical risk leads to institutional de-risking, which in turn triggers a crypto deleveraging.
Leverage as the Amplifier: The $875 million liquidation event in January 2026 is a direct echo of the Q4 2025 crash [2]. It demonstrates that the market remains dangerously over-leveraged and susceptible to cascading liquidations.
The Faltering Narrative: Just as in late 2025, the "digital gold" narrative is failing to hold up under pressure. Bitcoin is once again behaving like a risk asset, not a safe haven. The elevated 10-year Treasury yield, currently around 4.2%, continues to put pressure on risk assets, just as it did in the latter half of 2025 [1].
Conclusion: Breaking the Cycle
History does not repeat itself, but it often rhymes. The crypto market of early 2026 is rhyming very closely with the painful deleveraging of late 2025. The same structural vulnerabilities—an over-reliance on USD-denominated leverage and a narrative that is not yet fully accepted by institutional capital in times of crisis—are still present.
The lesson from the 2025 cycle is clear: for as long as the Bitcoin market is dominated by leveraged derivatives, it will be prone to violent, sentiment-driven boom-and-bust cycles. It will remain tethered to the traditional financial system and will struggle to fulfill its promise as a truly independent, non-sovereign store of value.
Breaking this cycle will require a fundamental shift in the structure of the market. It will require a move away from speculative, leveraged trading and towards a greater emphasis on long-term holding and the use of Bitcoin as a genuine alternative to fiat currencies. Until that shift occurs, investors should be prepared for more of the same: thrilling rallies fueled by leverage, followed by painful crashes when the tide of sentiment inevitably turns. The ghosts of 2025 are still with us, and they have a lot to teach us about the market of today.
This article was written by a senior analyst at Crypto University. The information contained herein is for educational purposes only. Leveraged trading is extremely risky and not suitable for all investors.
References
[1] BeInCrypto. (2026, January 20). Why Capital Is Shifting From Bitcoin to Gold in Early 2026. https://beincrypto.com/capital-shift-bitcoin-gold/
[2] Nasdaq. (2026, January 16). Crypto Market Update: Trump’s Tariff Threats Trigger US$875 Million Crypto Liquidation Wave. https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/crypto-market-update-trumps-tariff-threats-trigger-us-875-million-crypto-liquidation-wave
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