
Crypto traders debate whether 2025’s drawdown is a new bear market or a late-cycle reset as QE, global rate cuts, and the U.S. CLARITY Act shape the 2026 outlook.
Summary
- Bitcoin slipped from key highs and broke major support as most large-cap coins posted yearly losses, while only privacy plays like Monero, Zcash and BNB stayed green.
- Macro divergence, from U.S./UK rate cuts to Japan’s hikes and renewed geopolitical risk, weighs on sentiment even as growing stablecoin supply signals latent liquidity.
- The Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act, which could split SEC/CFTC oversight and end “regulation by enforcement,” is set for Senate review in early 2026.
Cryptocurrency traders and investors are questioning whether the digital asset market has entered a bear phase as 2025 draws to a close, amid ongoing price declines and speculation about potential regulatory changes and monetary policy shifts in 2026.
Bitcoin traded below recent highs following the release of U.S. Consumer Price Index data and an interest rate cut from the Bank of England. The combined cryptocurrency market capitalization retreated near a key trillion-dollar threshold before recovering slightly, according to market data.
Among the top 50 digital assets with a full year of price history, only privacy tokens Zcash and Monero, along with Binance’s BNB token, posted positive returns for the year, according to price data. Bitcoin declined on a year-to-date basis, while numerous other major cryptocurrencies recorded significant losses over the same period.
In the fourth quarter, Bitcoin (BTC) fell below a major price level and has traded in a range beneath that threshold. The decline broke a key support level, prompting several market analysts to adopt bearish mid-term outlooks.
Peter Brandt, a market analyst, forecast a potential severe decline in 2026, stating that each cryptocurrency bull run has produced diminishing returns and that previous parabolic advances have experienced substantial corrections. Brandt argued that the current parabolic advance has been violated and projected that a decline from the all-time high could bring prices to significantly lower levels.
FED pivots on crypto
While the United States and United Kingdom have implemented interest rate cuts, the Bank of Japan raised its rates to the highest levels in five years. The divergent monetary policies have added uncertainty to global markets, with potential implications for the yen carry trade, a strategy where traders borrow yen at low interest rates to purchase higher-yielding assets in other currencies.
Global economic uncertainty, the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, and emerging tensions between the United States and Venezuela represent additional factors affecting cryptocurrency market sentiment, according to market observers.
The stablecoin market capitalization has grown significantly over the past twelve months, according to market data, indicating available liquidity within the cryptocurrency ecosystem.
The United States implemented several interest rate cuts in 2025, and market pricing currently anticipates another reduction, which would maintain Federal Reserve quantitative easing policies. Quantitative easing typically increases liquidity by expanding the money supply and injecting capital into the financial system. Historical data shows that periods of significant quantitative easing, including during the COVID-19 pandemic, have coincided with cryptocurrency bull runs.
Industry leaders, including Binance’s founder, have expressed support for a potential supercycle thesis, suggesting that 2026 could mark the beginning of a new quantitative easing cycle. Some market participants argue that 2025 should not be characterized as a bull run due to the year’s quantitative tightening policies.
The White House confirmed that the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act will be considered by the Senate as early as January, according to an official statement. The legislation will enter the committee stage, where amendments and finalization occur before floor consideration. Early indications suggest the bill may pass, according to political observers.
The CLARITY Act aims to establish clear distinctions between tokens classified as securities and those classified as commodities, dividing regulatory oversight between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. If enacted, the legislation would provide cryptocurrency companies in the United States with a more transparent regulatory framework, replacing the current system of regulation through litigation.




