What Drove Crypto Markets Lower This Week?
Crypto markets extended their pullback as trading activity slowed heading into the holiday period. Bitcoin fell more than 5% over the past week, sliding to a low near $84,400 on Thursday before stabilizing above $87,700 by Friday, according to TradingView data. The move capped another volatile stretch that has weighed on sentiment across major digital assets. Liquidity conditions thinned as traders reduced exposure, a pattern that often magnifies price swings during quieter calendar periods. The broader market followed bitcoin lower, reinforcing concerns that volatility remains a central risk for crypto-linked balance sheets and treasury strategies. That volatility has become especially relevant for digital asset treasury companies, whose market value increasingly tracks the tokens they hold. Industry executives have warned that sharp swings in token prices can push these firms into repeated premiums and discounts to net asset value, creating instability that extends beyond day-to-day price action.
Investor Takeaway
Is Bitcoin Entering Another Post-Cycle Cooldown?
Fidelity’s Director of Global Macro, Jurien Timmer, has added weight to the growing discussion around bitcoin’s four-year cycle. He argues that recent price behavior fits closely with past patterns, both in timing and magnitude, raising the possibility that the latest halving-driven phase has already run its course. Timmer points to bitcoin’s October peak near $125,000 as a key reference. Reached after roughly 145 months of cumulative advances across multiple cycles, the high aligns with previous cycle tops when measured against historical analogs. In past cycles, bitcoin’s strongest rallies were followed by extended consolidation or drawdown periods commonly referred to as “crypto winters.” “While I remain a secular bull on bitcoin, my concern is that bitcoin may well have ended another four year cycle halving phase, both in price and time,” Timmer wrote on X. “If we visually line up all the bull markets, we can see that the October high of $125k after 145 months of rallying fits pretty well with what one might expect. Bitcoin winters have lasted about a year, so my sense is that 2026 could be a year off for bitcoin. Support is at $65,000 to $75,000.” Under this framework, 2026 would resemble prior cooldown phases rather than the explosive growth years that followed halvings. That view stands in contrast to more aggressive upside forecasts still circulating in crypto markets.
How Does Bitcoin Compare With Gold Right Now?
Timmer also draws a sharp contrast between bitcoin’s recent weakness and gold’s performance this year. While bitcoin has struggled to hold momentum, gold has risen roughly 65% year to date, outperforming growth in global money supply. He notes that gold’s behavior during its latest correction fits a classic bull-market pattern. Rather than retracing sharply, the metal has retained most of its gains, a sign that buyers remain active even during pullbacks. Bitcoin, by contrast, has given back a larger share of its recent advance. Timmer does not expect a near-term rebalancing between the two assets. In his view, gold’s role as a defensive asset has reasserted itself during periods of macro uncertainty, while bitcoin remains more sensitive to cycle dynamics and liquidity conditions.
Investor Takeaway
What Does This Mean for 2025 and Beyond?
If the four-year cycle thesis holds, bitcoin may spend the coming months trading within a wide range rather than pushing to fresh highs. Timmer’s identified support zone between $65,000 and $75,000 would mark a deep retracement from recent peaks but still sit well above levels seen in earlier cycles. For crypto-linked companies and funds, that environment raises practical challenges. Balance sheets tied closely to token prices face ongoing valuation swings, while investors may demand clearer paths to durability beyond price appreciation alone. Seasonal factors may continue to shape near-term moves, with thinner volumes leaving markets vulnerable to sharper declines or short-lived rebounds. Beyond that, attention is likely to turn toward whether bitcoin can build a base that resembles prior consolidation phases—or whether structural changes in market participation alter the familiar rhythm. For now, the message from recent price action and macro commentary is cautious. Bitcoin remains far above its pre-halving levels, but history suggests that cycles rarely move in straight lines. Whether 2026 becomes a pause year, as Timmer suggests, will depend on how the current drawdown resolves in the months ahead.
