Bitcoin narratives keep shifting, and one of the longest running ideas now looks fragile. The familiar four year cycle model no longer explains how capital flows into crypto. According to Bitwise leadership, structural change already rewired the market.
A new mix of regulation, institutional demand, and macro policy now drives price behavior more than halvings or past boom bust patterns.
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Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan says Bitcoin looks ready to break away from its historical four year cycle. Speaking on the Bankless YouTube channel, the Bitwise chief investment officer explained that the forces behind earlier cycles lost influence over time.
Hougan argued that analysts leaned too heavily on repetition. Halvings, interest rates, and industry failures once explained downturns. Those drivers now carry less weight.
The Bitcoin halving still reduces supply, but each event removes a smaller portion than before. Hougan said the effect no longer acts as a dominant price catalyst.
Previous cycles also reflected damage from major industry collapses. Hougan pointed to Mt. Gox, the ICO crash, and FTX as defining moments that deepened past downturns.
Those risks now appear smaller. Regulation expanded. Spot exchange traded funds entered the market. Qualified custodians replaced many early structures that lacked safeguards.
Crypto now operates inside a tighter framework. Hougan sees that shift as a stabilizing force rather than a speculative accelerant.
“You have these one-time generational massive forces of regulatory improvement and institutional adoption, and I think they’ll just overwhelm whatever lingering tiny forces persist from the old four-year cycle.”
Hougan believes institutional demand now dominates Bitcoin market structure. Capital from asset managers, funds, and regulated vehicles flows differently than retail speculation.
That demand behaves less cyclically. Allocations respond to portfolio strategy, macro exposure, and liquidity rather than hype cycles or calendar based expectations.
In Hougan view, that structural demand weakens the logic behind repeating boom bust phases tied to fixed timelines.
Interest rate cycles once reinforced crypto downturns. Hougan noted sharp rate increases in 2018 and 2022 aligned with Bitcoin declines.
Looking ahead, expectations center on easing rather than tightening through 2026. That removes another pillar supporting the old cycle model.
Lower rate pressure changes risk appetite and liquidity conditions, both of which support alternative assets like Bitcoin.
Hougan also addressed broader economic scenarios. Strong growth supports risk assets. Slower growth often triggers policy responses that inject liquidity.
Bitcoin can benefit in either case. Hougan framed the asset as flexible rather than fragile, adapting to multiple macro outcomes.
He stressed that the comments do not reflect a specific price target. The point stays structural, not predictive. Bitcoin, in his view, continues trending higher without resetting to historical cycle lows.
At time of writing, Bitcoin trades at $88,249.