Whenever investors mention Bitcoin in the past, what comes to mind is nothing more than “massive surges followed by massive crashes” or “a disastrous collapse of 90% from the peak.” However, the market structure is quietly starting to shift: in this market cycle, Bitcoin’s maximum drawdown is only about 50%, which is clearly more condensed than in the past. Analysts believe this reflects Bitcoin evolving from a “speculative toy” into a mature asset class.
Crypto investment platform AdLunam co-founder and market analyst Jason Fernandes said: “Bitcoin’s drawdown has narrowed to around 50%, which is proof that the market structure is becoming mature.” He further explained that as market liquidity keeps deepening and institutional participation increases, the magnitude of Bitcoin’s upside and downside fluctuations naturally gets compressed. He emphasized:
At this stage, the market’s focus is no longer about questioning Bitcoin’s legitimacy, but about how to optimize asset allocation.
Saying goodbye to wild swings, the growth curve is “mellowing”
Fidelity Digital Assets analyst Zack Wainwright has also shared a similar view on a social platform recently. He pointed out that as the market grows more mature, Bitcoin is “no longer so blindly爆發,” and the probability of extreme downside risk is also decreasing.
Looking back, Bitcoin has gone through “crypto winters” multiple times in the past, with the severity so harrowing that it’s hard to forget:
Compared with the drawdowns in these two bear markets, after Bitcoin set a new all-time high of about $126,000 in October 2025, although there has been a correction, the severity is far less dramatic than before.
Zack Wainwright commented: “The strength of the rally in each cycle is more muted than the previous one, and the risk of downside declines is also no longer as shocking and hair-raising.”
However, not all analysts are optimistic about this. Bloomberg Intelligence senior commodities strategist Mike McGlone warned that he believes “the crypto bubble has burst.” If, in the future, broad sell-offs hit risk assets such as the stock market and commodities, Bitcoin could still face the risk of “mean reversion” (the phenomenon that asset prices tend to return to historical average levels over the long term), potentially dropping to the $10,000 range.
Jason Fernandes, who has sparred with Mike McGlone across the airwaves many times, pushed back, emphasizing that crypto’s “market size” is already very different from before. As Bitcoin’s market value continues to grow, the funding scale required to trigger a 90% drop is far too large, so the chance of an extreme collapse is extremely small.
In addition, from spot Bitcoin ETFs to exposure by retirement funds, these institutional-scale capital “moats,” structurally, also make large-scale sell-offs harder.
From a “high-risk bet” to a “portfolio optimizer”
Another sign that the Bitcoin market is maturing is reflected in how institutional investors allocate assets. Jason Fernandes said that what truly changes institutional investors’ attitudes is actually portfolio data. He said:
If you only need a small allocation of 1% to 3% to significantly improve portfolio returns while also improving the Sharpe Ratio (a metric that measures risk-adjusted returns), and without clearly increasing overall drawdown risk, then Bitcoin’s role is no longer just a single bet—it becomes more like an efficiency-boosting tool within a diversified investment portfolio.
This positioning has also changed how institutions evaluate risk. Jason Fernandes said:
The problem is no longer “Is holding Bitcoin too risky?” but “If you have no allocation to Bitcoin at all, will the portfolio miss opportunities?”
A recent research report from Fidelity also supports this view: looking across the performance of major asset classes over the past 10 years, Bitcoin delivered astonishing returns of about 20,000%, far outpacing U.S. stocks, gold, and bonds; despite wild volatility, its risk-adjusted performance still leads the pack. The report mentioned:
Although Bitcoin is a relatively young asset, it has rapidly developed into a major asset category and, over the past 15 years, has won the crown for best performance in 11 of those years.
However, there is also a catch. Jason Fernandes reminded investors: “As Bitcoin enters maturity and volatility converges, the market should expect Bitcoin’s future returns to normalize. That early kind of asymmetric massive rally came together with extreme drawdown risk; now that the drawdown has shrunk, Bitcoin’s performance will increasingly resemble macro asset allocation rather than venture-capital-style high-risk bets.”