Key Takeaways
- Bitcoin has erased all its 2025 gains, falling below $93,714
- Institutional buyers have pulled back, removing crucial market support
- Smaller cryptocurrencies have suffered even steeper declines
Bitcoin has wiped out its entire 2025 price surge, dropping below $93,714 as the cryptocurrency bear market intensifies. The world’s largest digital asset has now erased the more than 30% gain it registered since the start of the year, signaling a dramatic reversal from October’s record high of $126,251.
Institutional Support Evaporates
The market downturn comes as major institutional buyers—from ETF allocators to corporate treasuries—have quietly withdrawn from the market. This has deprived Bitcoin of the flow-driven support that propelled it to record highs earlier in 2025.
Matthew Hougan, Bitwise Asset Management’s chief investment officer, noted: “The general market is risk-off. Crypto was the canary in the coal mine for that, it was the first to flinch.”
ETF Boom Fades
For much of 2025, institutional investment through Bitcoin ETFs provided the backbone of the cryptocurrency’s legitimacy and price support. According to Bloomberg data, ETFs collectively absorbed more than $25 billion, pushing assets under management to approximately $169 billion.
These steady allocation flows had helped position Bitcoin as a portfolio diversifier—a potential hedge against inflation, monetary debasement, and political uncertainty. However, this narrative is now showing signs of strain.
Corporate Bitcoin Strategy Under Pressure
One notable example of the buying strike comes from Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy, the software company that transformed into a major Bitcoin holder. The firm’s stock now trades near parity with its Bitcoin holdings, indicating investors are no longer willing to pay a premium for Saylor’s high-conviction leverage approach to cryptocurrency investment.
Historical Patterns Repeat
Boom and bust cycles are nothing new for Bitcoin. The cryptocurrency experienced a massive 13,000% surge in 2017, only to collapse by nearly 75% the following year.
“The sentiment in crypto retail is pretty negative,” observed Hougan, who nevertheless views the current pullback as a potential buying opportunity. “They don’t want to live through another 50 per cent pullback. People are front-running that by stepping out of the market.”
Smaller Tokens Hit Harder
The market downturn has been particularly brutal for smaller, less liquid cryptocurrencies. A MarketVector index tracking the bottom half of the largest 100 digital assets has declined by approximately 60% in 2025, reflecting how traders’ preferred high-volatility tokens are suffering disproportionately during the selloff.
Chris Newhouse, director of research at decentralised finance firm Ergonia, commented: “The markets are always an ebb and flow, and cyclicality in crypto is nothing new. But among friends, Telegram chats, and at conferences, the general sentiment I’ve received shows scepticism around capital deployment, and no natural bullish catalysts.”
Bitcoin’s turbulent 2025 has seen the cryptocurrency drop to $74,400 in April following Trump’s tariff announcements, then rebound to record highs before the current retreat. The original cryptocurrency still dominates the digital asset space, accounting for nearly 60% of the crypto market’s total $3.2 trillion valuation.



