Absence of Euphoria Mitigates Risk of Major Capitulation
Despite Bitcoin’s retreat from its October all-time highs, the crypto market’s structure does not exhibit the “euphoric” characteristics that typically precede a catastrophic collapse. In a recent analysis on the What Bitcoin Did podcast, macroeconomist Lyn Alden argued that the absence of retail mania and excessive leverage suggests the market is unlikely to face a “major capitulation” event in the near term, challenging the validity of the traditional four-year cycle models.
The Death of the Four-Year Cycle?
Alden’s thesis rests on a decoupling of Bitcoin’s price action from its programmed halving events. She posits that the current market is being driven by broader macroeconomic liquidity conditions and maturing institutional interest rather than the mechanical supply shock of the halving.
“The cycle could go on for longer than people can expect, because it’s not driven by the halving, it’s driven by broader macro and interest in the asset itself,” Alden stated.
This perspective aligns with a growing consensus among institutional heavyweights. Matt Hougan, Chief Investment Officer at Bitwise, recently dismissed the rigidity of the four-year cycle, suggesting the market has entered a phase of sustained growth that could last “for a good few years.” The implication is a transition from boom-and-bust volatility to a more elongated, albeit choppy, secular uptrend.
Quantitative Status: Correction, Not Crash
Market data supports the view that the asset class is currently in a healthy, if painful, consolidation rather than a systemic meltdown.
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Price Action: After peaking at $125,100 on October 5, Bitcoin has entered a corrective phase, trading near $85,710 at press time.
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Drawdown: The asset is down approximately 22.46% over the past 30 days, having bounced from a local low of $80,700.
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Sentiment: Contrasting with the “up only” exuberance seen in previous cycle peaks, current sentiment is cautious. Traders who anticipated a run to $250,000—a target floated by BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes—have been forced to recalibrate, flushing out speculative froth.
Alden emphasizes that this recalibration is healthy. “We haven’t hit euphoric levels in this cycle; therefore, there is less of a reason to expect a kind of major capitulation,” she noted, adding that market outcomes are “usually not as good as people expect and usually not as bad as people expect.”
The Bearish Counter-Thesis
While Alden remains cautiously optimistic about a recovery, dissenting voices warn of deeper turbulence. Vineet Budki, CEO of venture firm Sigma Capital, presents a significantly more bearish outlook, projecting a potential 65% to 70% retracement over the next two years. This divergence in expert opinion highlights the current fragility of investor confidence, where the psychological expectation of a “guaranteed” bull market is clashing with macroeconomic friction.
“People kind of get in their mindset where they are owed a bull market,” Alden warned. “No one is owed a bull market.”
Strategic Outlook
Looking forward, the market sits at a pivotal junction between consolidation and potential accumulation. Alden’s forecast points toward a recovery timeline where Bitcoin reclaims the $100,000 level in 2026, potentially setting new highs then or in 2027. For investors, the current environment demands a shift in strategy from chasing short-term “halving pumps” to managing exposure for a prolonged, macro-driven cycle. The primary risk remains a deepening of the current correction if macroeconomic conditions tighten, but the structural absence of euphoria suggests that the “max pain” scenario of a total market collapse remains a low-probability tail event.
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