CryptocurrencyNewsStock research & analytics

How crypto lived through 2025: a brief chronicle.

Join our Trading Community on Telegram
How crypto lived through 2025: a brief chronicle.

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.

0
0
Disclaimer

All content provided on this website (https://wildinwest.com/) -including attachments, links, or referenced materials — is for informative and entertainment purposes only and should not be considered as financial advice. Third-party materials remain the property of their respective owners.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related posts
Disruptive technologyNewsStock brokersStock research & analytics

Is the market turning away from Microsoft?

The current situation with Microsoft perfectly illustrates one of the most unpleasant but useful…
Read more
CryptocurrencyNewsStock research & analytics

CLARITY Still Without Clarity

The U.S. Senate Banking Committee has decided to pause further work and discussion on the CLARITY…
Read more
NewsStock brokersStock research & analytics

The Iranian rial has effectively collapsed to zero

Iran’s national currency is going through one of the most dramatic episodes in its history.
Read more
Telegram
Subscribe to our Telegram channel

To stay up-to-date with the latest news from the financial world

Subscribe now!