Saturday Nov 1 2025 02:00
2 min
Despite the hype surrounding a potential 'Trump Era' for cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin has underperformed nearly all major asset classes. 2025 could be dubbed the 'Year of Disappointment' for Bitcoin.
Since President Trump took office in January, Bitcoin has delivered a modest return of approximately 5.8%. In contrast, the Nasdaq and S&P 500 have both seen double-digit gains, and even gold, a classic safe-haven asset, has significantly outperformed Bitcoin. Investors who anticipated a boost from the 'Trump trade' now face a stark reality: an unfavorable macroeconomic environment, capital rotation into AI stocks, and long-term investor profit-taking, all of which have limited Bitcoin's upside for much of the year.
We appear to be in a late-cycle consolidation phase. Long-term holders are de-risking, miners are selling, short-term buyers are underwater, and derivatives dominate. This combination typically leads to an extended period of consolidation before the next true rally. Historically, Bitcoin has thrived in cyclical resets—weak hands leave, strong hands rebuild positions, and macro liquidity eventually returns. We may currently be in this rebuilding phase.
The $97,000 to $100,000 range is crucial. If Bitcoin can hold this range through the two Federal Reserve meetings, early 2026 could look promising—especially if rate cuts and fiscal expansion begin to reignite risk appetite. However, if this support breaks, we could see a capitulation sell-off before the next leg up.
The bottom line: This isn't a crash; it's a recalibration. Bitcoin's underperformance this year stems not from fundamentals but from capital rotation and the natural volatility of a maturing asset class. Once the macro environment shifts back to a favorable one, Bitcoin is expected to re-emerge as a premier high-beta safe-haven asset in global markets.
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