The Demise of Bitcoin's Four-Year Cycle and the Rise of Liquidity-Driven Markets

Generado por agente de IAAdrian HoffnerRevisado porAInvest News Editorial Team
sábado, 8 de noviembre de 2025, 7:21 pm ET2 min de lectura
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Bitcoin's historical narrative has long been tethered to the cadence of its halving events-algorithmic supply shocks that, until recently, reliably triggered price surges. The 2012, 2016, and 2020 halvings followed a predictable pattern: reduced block rewards, heightened scarcity, and eventual retail-driven euphoria. But the 2024 halving, which cut miner rewards to 3.125 BTC, defied this script. Instead of a sharp post-halving rally, Bitcoin's price behavior became increasingly entangled with macroeconomic forces and institutional liquidity dynamics, signaling the end of the four-year cycle as a reliable market driver, according to a 21Shares analysis.

The Halving's Diminishing Supply Shock

The 2024 halving reduced Bitcoin's annual supply growth from 1.7% to 0.85%, a marginal adjustment given that 94% of the total supply is already in circulation, according to the 21Shares analysis. This diminishing marginal impact of halvings-coupled with the rise of institutional-grade infrastructure-has shifted the focus from algorithmic scarcity to real-world liquidity. For instance, MARA HoldingsMARA-- recently raised $2 billion via a stock offering to fund BitcoinBTC-- acquisitions through over-the-counter channels, prioritizing discretion and avoiding market slippage, as reported by Ambcrypto. This liquidity-driven strategy reflects a broader trend: public companies now view direct market purchases as more efficient than traditional mining, especially in a post-halving environment where Bitcoin's cost basis has become increasingly attractive.

Institutional Capital Rewrites the Rules

The launch of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs in early 2024 marked a tectonic shift. Pension funds, asset managers, and corporate treasuries now allocate Bitcoin as a regulated, long-term asset, diverging from retail speculation, according to the 21Shares analysis. These institutions operate with multi-year horizons, smoothing out volatility and reducing Bitcoin's sensitivity to retail-driven cycles. For example, BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, and HSBC now offer Bitcoin custody and trading services, while corporations like MicroStrategy have accumulated billions in Bitcoin as a treasury hedge against inflation, as noted in a 2025 Altrady report.

This institutionalization has also spurred infrastructure innovation. Hut 8HUT-- and Eric Trump's American BitcoinABTC-- initiative, aiming for 50 EH/s in hash rate, exemplifies the industrialization of mining and strategic Bitcoin reserve-building, as described in a GlobeNewswire report. Such projects are less about speculative gains and more about securing long-term exposure in a maturing market.

Macroeconomic Forces Take Center Stage

Bitcoin's price movements now mirror traditional macro assets. During the 2022 rate-hike cycle, it declined in tandem with equities, while improved global liquidity in 2023–2025 drove a synchronized rebound, according to a 2025 OKX report. This correlation underscores Bitcoin's evolution into a liquidity-sensitive asset, where Federal Reserve policy, risk appetite, and global capital flows outweigh supply-side narratives.

A telling example: Bitcoin's 2025 price swings during macroeconomic corrections (e.g., inflation data surprises or geopolitical shocks) highlight its vulnerability to traditional financial variables, as noted in the Altrady report. Unlike the retail-driven volatility of past cycles, these movements reflect institutional portfolios rebalancing in response to broader economic signals.

Challenges and the Path Forward

Despite this progress, hurdles remain. The U.S. lacks a cohesive crypto regulatory framework, complicating institutional onboarding, as noted in the Altrady report. Custody risks and persistent volatility also test Bitcoin's appeal to risk-averse investors. However, the EU's MiCA regulations and growing institutional infrastructure suggest a trajectory toward normalization.

The four-year cycle is dead. In its place, a new paradigm emerges: Bitcoin as a macro asset, priced not by halving countdowns but by liquidity conditions, institutional demand, and global economic currents. For investors, this means abandoning old heuristics and embracing a framework where Bitcoin's future is written in the language of capital flows, not block rewards.

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