Bitwise CIO Signals New Era: Bitcoin’s Next Decade Will Be a Grind, Not a Cycle - Crypto Economy

TL;DR

  • For years, the halving explained Bitcoin, but that framework has lost strength as BTC moves away from pure speculation and gains institutional scale and depth.
  • Matt Hougan says BTC is entering a ten-year grind, where ETFs, regulation, and tokenization matter more than the halving and curb extreme volatility.
  • Institutional capital advances slowly and methodically, liquidity outweighs noise, and BTC behaves like a macro asset within a more mature market.

For more than a decade, the Bitcoin market was explained through a simple, repetitive framework. Every four years, the halving cut issuance, prices climbed, enthusiasm spilled over, and a deep correction followed, resetting the cycle. That pattern worked while Bitcoin operated as an asset dominated by miners, retail traders, and short-term speculative flows.

That framework is now losing explanatory power. Matt Hougan, CIO of Bitwise, argues that the market is undergoing a structural transition. Bitcoin no longer moves solely on supply shocks. It is gradually integrating into the traditional financial system and responding to larger, slower, and more stable forces. Spot ETFs, greater regulatory clarity, widespread stablecoin usage, and the expansion of tokenization are pushing BTC into a different regime.

![](data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=‘http://www.w3.org/2000/svg’%20viewBox=‘0%200%20586%20366’%3E%3C/svg%3E)

Hougan describes this process as a ten-year “grind.” He is not talking about explosive rallies or abrupt crashes, but about a prolonged upward trend with sustained returns and lower volatility. That lens helps explain why Bitcoin can fall roughly 30% from its most recent highs without triggering a market breakdown. According to CoinGecko data, BTC’s annual volatility has even dropped below that of Nvidia, a contrast that would have been unthinkable in earlier cycles.

Bitcoin Posted Lower Annual Volatility Than Nvidia

This does not mean cycles disappear entirely. Sebastian Bea, CIO of Reserve One, points out that markets are still operated by people and that human behavior preserves recurring patterns. Even so, Bea acknowledges that the structure has changed. Returns of 2x instead of 10x signal a larger, more liquid market that is less sensitive to extreme shocks.

The flow of institutional capital plays a central role. Hougan notes that many major firms approved Bitcoin ETFs several months after launch and that a typical allocation requires up to eight quarterly meetings. That slow, procedural process introduces inertia that smooths price action and stretches timelines.

![](data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=‘http://www.w3.org/2000/svg’%20viewBox=‘0%200%201024%20460’%3E%3C/svg%3E)

Liquidity Takes Center Stage

The key variable is no longer politics, but liquidity. Glassnode metrics show that long-term holders remain in their positions, which has helped limit structural selling pressure. Bitcoin increasingly functions as a macro asset, sensitive to global financial conditions.

The halving is not dead, but it has lost part of its prominence. The market is entering a more institutional and slower phase. Under that scenario, exponential gains may shift toward other parts of the crypto ecosystem, while Bitcoin climbs a long staircase, with fewer elevators and fewer abrupt drops

BTC-0,12%
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