TL;DR
Crypto bear markets rarely end because one chart suddenly looks better. They usually end when several pieces start lining up at the same time: supply dynamics, liquidity, investor access, macro conditions, and a reason for capital to believe the next cycle has a stronger foundation than the last one.
That is the frame behind research from Fidelity Digital Assets, available through its research and insights portal, which looks at the recurring catalysts that have helped past crypto downturns give way to new market phases.
The first catalyst is the most familiar one: Bitcoin’s four-year halving cycle. Halvings do not magically create a bull market the next day, but they have historically changed the supply conversation around BTC. When new issuance falls and demand later improves, the market can become more sensitive to fresh capital inflows.
The second catalyst is institutional custody. This one gets less attention from retail traders because it is not as exciting as a price breakout, but it matters enormously. Large investors cannot allocate seriously if custody, reporting, insurance, and operational controls are not mature enough. Every improvement in that infrastructure lowers friction for institutions that were previously unable or unwilling to participate.
Third comes the macro backdrop. Crypto trades like a high-conviction, high-volatility asset, but it still lives inside the global liquidity cycle. When rates are high, capital is expensive, and investors are paid to sit in cash, speculative assets often struggle. When liquidity improves, crypto tends to get more oxygen.
The fourth catalyst is regulation. Clear rules do not remove risk, but they can remove uncertainty. For serious capital, uncertainty is often worse than strictness. If the rules of the road become clearer around custody, token classification, stablecoins, ETFs, or exchange activity, more investors can make decisions without feeling that the ground may shift overnight.
The fifth piece is product development. In crypto, narratives need infrastructure. ETFs, staking products, tokenized assets, payment rails, scaling upgrades, and wallet improvements all help turn abstract interest into usable market access.
The danger with any historical framework is that traders turn it into a calendar. That is not what this kind of research can do. Past bear markets can show patterns, but they cannot guarantee timing. A halving may set up a supply story, but demand still has to arrive. Custody may improve, but institutions still need a reason to allocate. Regulation may become clearer, but price can still move against consensus.
The better takeaway is that crypto winter ends structurally before it ends emotionally. By the time everyone feels confident again, several of these catalysts are usually already in motion. Traders looking only for a green daily candle may miss the quieter changes that prepare the next cycle.
For now, Fidelity’s framework is useful because it keeps the conversation grounded. Instead of asking whether crypto is “back” based on one rally, it asks whether the conditions that supported previous recoveries are appearing again. That is a healthier way to read the market, especially after a cycle that punished both hype and impatience.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.