Image The bear market that wasn't

The bear market that wasn't

Timer5 minuti di lettura

There is a version of the current market narrative that holds that digital assets are in distress, that the enthusiasm of late 2024 has curdled, that the drawdown signals something structurally wrong, and that the institutional interest of recent years was, perhaps, less durable than advertised.

That version is worth examining carefully. Because the data, taken as a whole, tells a different story.

Start with the adoption question. Critics of this space have long argued that adoption was a vague aspiration rather than a measurable reality. That argument is now difficult to sustain. Stablecoin transaction volumes rival Visa and Mastercard combined. Tokenised assets, led by private credit and US Treasuries, have more than doubled over the course of last year. On-chain applications are starting to look less like speculative toys and more like lean, cash-generating businesses. There is no asset manager in the world ignoring digital assets, and if there is, you should probably ditch it. The word "adoption" once described a future state. We can argue it now describes the present.

Prices fell, investors stayed

Which brings us to the institutional question, and this is where the most recent data should arrest the attention of serious allocators. The first phase of Bitcoin's recent drawdown has not triggered panic among institutional investors. Professional allocators reduced exposure modestly but largely maintained their positions compared with last year. More revealing than who held is who added: endowments, pensions, and sovereign wealth funds continued adding exposure even as prices fell. Our analyst Matt Kimmell described that activity as quiet accumulation. A roughly 25% quarterly drawdown did not trigger broad institutional capitulation, with most declines in assets under management reflecting price moves rather than large investor outflows. There is a distinction worth preserving here: assets fell because prices fell. Investors, by and large, did not leave.

The nuance is important. Historically, crypto bear markets have redistributed supply from short-term traders to long-term holders. The ETF era now gives us, for the first time, a rigorous way to track whether institutional capital follows that same pattern. So far, it does.

Then came the Iran shock. Last weekend's escalation provided an unscripted test of Bitcoin's evolving role in a portfolio, and the results were notable. Bitcoin rallied into broader instability. Rather than acting as a vehicle for panic selling, it attracted capital, as our Head of Research James Butterfill highlighted in his latest article. This matters because prior episodes of weekend geopolitical shock typically saw Bitcoin absorb selling pressure, with prices recovering once equity markets reopened and risk was redistributed. This time, the pattern was different. 

After five consecutive weeks of ETF outflows totalling $4.3 billion, last week saw $1 billion of inflows. The first trading day after the weekend escalation recorded a further $500 million. Capital moved toward Bitcoin precisely as geopolitical uncertainty peaked. “The Iran crisis has not created Bitcoin's safe haven thesis. But it has provided the clearest real-world test of it in the current cycle”, James writes.  

A new Bitcoin milestone

Sometime next week, the Bitcoin network will mine its 20 millionth coin, meaning 95% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist is already in circulation. It took roughly 17 years to mine the first 20 million coins. The final one million will take over a century. We will mark that milestone next week.  Step back from the price chart for a moment and consider what that arc represents. A monetary system launched with no government, no balance sheet, no institutional backing — operating continuously for seventeen years, producing a coin count that is now 95% final, with the remainder governed by a protocol that no political authority has ever modified by a single satoshi. That is not a feature of any other asset class in existence.

Bear markets in this space have always looked, in the moment, like structural failures. They have, with consistency, turned out to be episodes of redistribution — from short-term holders to long-term ones, from leveraged speculation to patient capital. The current episode has the hallmarks of that pattern: leverage cleared, valuations normalised, institutional positions largely intact, and an emergent safe haven behaviour under real geopolitical stress. This alleged bear market will prove as short-lived as Bitcoin will prove long-lived

Scritto da
Jérémy Le Bescont
Pubblicato il06 Mar 2026

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