Tired, but not defeated?
2025 will go down in history as a year of big numbers, loud promises, and equally loud disappointments. The market has finally matured: less naive euphoria, more politics, regulators, and corporate accounting. Below is the chronology of a year in which Bitcoin surprised everyone once again, but not everyone ended up happy.
January
The year started energetically, like a morning coffee after long holidays.
- BTC set a new all-time high above $109k, confirming its status as the asset that gets buried most often but lives longer than the rest.
- XRP suddenly surged on ETF expectations and around the RLUSD narrative. Market veterans breathed a sigh of relief: “still alive.”
The market entered the year with a feeling that “this time it’s definitely grown-up.”
February
Reality reminded everyone of itself.
- Trade tariffs and a new wave of trade wars hit global risk appetite.
- A strong outflow from Bitcoin ETFs began – institutions suddenly remembered that taking profits is also an option.
- The Bybit hack of roughly $1.5 billion was a cold shower and a reminder: centralized exchanges are still vulnerable.
February fully brought skepticism and nervousness back to the market.
March
A month of unfulfilled expectations.
- The idea of a state BTC reserve turned out to be far less масштабed than crypto-Twitter fantasies had suggested. The disappointment was tangible.
- At the same time, politicians started talking about a more crypto-friendly stance. The promises sounded nice, specifics were minimal. The market, like an experienced investor, listened but did not believe.
April
A stress test.
- BTC fell toward $74k, forcing weak hands to capitulate.
- Then came a rebound that once again activated the market’s favorite mantra: “Bitcoin is dead, long live Bitcoin.”
- The main narrative of the year emerged – RWA and tokenized treasuries. Crypto decided once again to befriend traditional finance, but on its own terms.
May
Euphoria returned, though not for long.
- BTC set a new high around $112k, confirming that the April correction was just a pause.
- ETH unexpectedly surged after the Pectra update. The good old effect: “the update is out – the market woke up.”
May was a month of hopes and loud forecasts.
June
A month of serious people.
- Corporate players increased their interest in crypto reserves. Bitcoin was increasingly discussed not in Telegram chats, but in boardrooms.
- Geopolitical tensions boosted demand for safe-haven assets. BTC once again found itself in the same category as gold, not memecoins.
July
Regulatory turn.
- The GENIUS stablecoin law became one of the most significant regulatory steps of the year for the sector.
- BTC set a new high above $123k. The market believed that “big money” had arrived seriously and for the long term.
July became the peak of optimism.
August
Traditionally an unpleasant month.
- A wave of hacker attacks worth hundreds of millions of dollars reminded everyone that security in crypto is still not a standard, but a luxury.
- BTC moved into negative territory, summer liquidity evaporated, traders went on vacation, leaving the market alone with algorithms.
September
The return of macroeconomics.
- The Fed cut rates by 25 basis points — the market expected more, but was still satisfied.
- The SEC simplified the ETF launch process, once again warming institutional interest, albeit cautiously.
October
The climax of the year.
- BTC set the cycle peak around $126k.
- Record liquidations knocked the market out of balance. A classic ending to an overheated move.
- Hype around privacy coins began — a market tired of total transparency remembered old values.
November
“The hangover.”
- A sharp drop in BTC and ETH brought the market back down to earth.
- Massive ETF outflows showed that institutions are not married to crypto and easily file for divorce at the first opportunity.
December
No fairy tale.
- The Santa rally never happened. The market met the end of the year tired and overloaded.
- ETH received the Fusaka upgrade, but the price remained indifferent. Technology on its own, the market on its own — another lesson of the year.
Year in review
2025 became the year when the crypto market finally stopped being a “toy for enthusiasts” and also definitively did not become a safe haven. It was a year of major highs, painful corrections, political decisions, and the return of an old truth: crypto did not disappear, but easy money is no longer here. As befits a mature market.
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