After a historic and structurally different 2025, the crypto market is entering a new phase—one shaped less by retail speculation and more by institutional capital, regulation, and geopolitical strategy.
According to Patrick Liou, Director of Institutional at Gemini, many of the narratives that defined previous cycles are already breaking down. Looking ahead to 2026, Liou highlights five major predictions that signal how crypto’s role in global markets is evolving—from the end of the four-year cycle theory to sovereign Bitcoin adoption.
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1. The Four-Year Cycle Theory Breaks Down
Bitcoin is on track to finish 2025 in negative territory, directly challenging the long-held four-year halving cycle narrative. In past cycles, downturns often meant 75–90% drawdowns. This time, Bitcoin has pulled back roughly 30% from its highs—an important distinction.
Liou points to a far more mature market structure. Institutional participation, regulated investment vehicles, and deeper liquidity have all contributed to reduced volatility. As crypto continues to establish itself as an institutional asset class, historical playbooks are becoming less reliable.
While 2025 has largely been a year of consolidation, the setup for 2026 appears constructive.
Monetary policy is trending toward easing, regulatory clarity is improving, and institutional adoption is shifting from experimentation to execution—particularly through ETF growth and expanded custody and trading infrastructure.
This evolution is already visible in derivatives markets. Bitcoin options implied volatility has largely stabilized in the 25–40% range, well below prior regimes where volatility regularly sat between 70–80%. The result is a broader investor base and a more durable, secular bull case than previous cycles.
2. Bipartisan Crypto Momentum Ahead of the 2026 Midterms
Crypto’s political relevance is no longer theoretical. In 2024, Republicans were the first to actively court crypto voters, recognizing the sector as a growing and durable voting bloc. Liou expects Democrats to follow suit in 2026, solidifying crypto as a mainstream political issue.
A key catalyst is the long-anticipated Market Structure bill. While stalled in the Senate, momentum continues to build on both sides of the aisle. Liou expects the bill to pass in the first quarter of 2026—first through the Senate, then the House, and ultimately to the President’s desk.