Bitcoin pullback: Bitwise CIO highlights the "four-year cycle"
Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise Asset Management, identifies the bitcoin retracement's primary driver as the market's "four-year cycle," a pattern he says has occurred three previous times. Hougan frames the current sell-off as multi-causal but dominated by cyclical dynamics that tend to reassert themselves across extended crypto market timelines.
Key data points and recent price context
- Bitcoin (BTC) reached an all-time high of $126,279 in October.
- Last November BTC fell below $90,000 for the first time since April.
- Most recently, bitcoin tumbled below $61,000 — its lowest level in roughly 16 months.
- Bitwise manages more than $15 billion in assets under management.
- Bitwise launched the Bitwise Solana Staking ETF on Oct. 28; the fund is down about 57% since launch.
- Solana (SOL) is off more than 30% year-to-date.
- The protocol-level supply cap of bitcoin remains 21 million BTC.
These figures frame an environment where short-term price moves are large while long-term structural factors remain intact.
What the "four-year cycle" means for institutional investors
The four-year cycle refers to multi-year structural rhythms that have coincided with major bitcoin price inflection points. While specific mechanisms vary, institutional implications are consistent:
- Cyclical patterns can amplify leverage and derivative positioning across bull and bear phases, increasing intraday volatility.
- Multi-year cycles historically compress time horizons for capital deployment, prompting allocation shifts between risk assets (e.g., equities, gold, AI-related stocks) and crypto.
- Scarcity mechanics — most notably bitcoin's fixed supply of 21 million coins — remain a long-term structural argument even as short-term price dynamics oscillate.
Hougan emphasizes that cyclical retracements are not necessarily evidence of structural failure. He states that financialization and derivative demand may change intraday dynamics, but they do not erase the fundamental scarcity characteristic of bitcoin that underpins long-term allocation cases.
Other factors amplifying the decline
Beyond the four-year cycle, Hougan highlights several amplification mechanisms that have contributed to the recent pullback:
- Rotation into other asset classes: Institutional and retail flows have favored assets such as gold and AI-exposed equities over crypto in recent months, diverting capital.
- Macro and policy risk: Market participants assign higher short-term risk to macro or regulatory events, which in bear phases become magnified.
- Derivative positioning and ETF flows: The continued growth of crypto exchange-traded funds (ETF) and related derivatives changes intraday liquidity characteristics, potentially intensifying short-term selling pressure.
Why ETF growth may not destroy the scarcity case
Hougan argues that the rise of crypto ETFs does not negate bitcoin's scarcity argument. His core points for institutional investors:
- Derivative demand must eventually reconcile with spot market dynamics; large derivative positions exert pressure on spot liquidity but cannot alter the fixed supply of bitcoin.
- ETFs may change trading dynamics and price discovery intraday, but they also provide regulated, scalable on-ramps for institutional capital that can support long-term demand.
- Underneath the market, use-case adoption and limited supply remain structural anchors for allocation strategies that prioritize scarcity and long-duration exposure.
Tactical considerations for professional traders and allocators
- Liquidity management: Expect heightened intraday volatility when derivative and ETF flows dominate execution. Use execution algorithms and limit orders to reduce market impact.
- Position sizing: Align position sizes to multi-year cycle risk. Cycle-aware sizing helps institutional portfolios survive drawdowns tied to cyclical retracements.
- Diversification across crypto exposures: Consider differentiated exposure to spot BTC, staking ETFs (e.g., Solana-related vehicles), and derivatives to manage both return expectations and liquidity needs.
- Monitoring flow indicators: Track ETF inflows/outflows, futures open interest, and derivatives funding rates as short-term indicators of positioning pressure.
Bottom line: cyclical drawdowns versus structural thesis
The current bitcoin decline is best understood as a confluence of a recurring four-year cycle and amplified short-term dynamics from ETF and derivative flows, sector rotation, and macro risk. For institutional investors and allocators, the differentiation between short-term trading strategy and long-term structural allocation is critical: cyclical sell-offs can produce trading opportunities while the underlying scarcity and adoption narratives continue to inform longer-term allocation decisions.
Actionable signals to watch
- BTC spot price crossing multi-month support levels (e.g., recent $61,000 threshold) for confirmation of extended weakness.
- ETF flow trends: sustained net inflows into spot-backed crypto ETFs would signal longer-term institutional demand returning to the spot market.
- Derivatives metrics: rapid increases in open interest and extreme funding rates often precede short-term liquidations and can signal tactical risk.
Investors should combine cycle awareness with active risk management to navigate drawdowns while preserving optionality for multi-year recovery phases.
