Bear Markets Build Crypto Giants — Here’s Why

Source Cryptopolitan

It’s only rational to protect the balance sheet when capital gets expensive, regulatory postures harden overnight, and geopolitical shocks start tearing through markets in hours instead of weeks. Companies pause new initiatives and wait for a signal that the environment is safe again. 

I’ve sat in enough quarterly business reviews to know that “we’ll revisit this when the market stabilizes” is practically a reflex for most decision-makers. But if you examine the operational history of crypto infrastructure rather than fixating on price charts, you start to notice something counterintuitive. The products that define the next cycle are almost never built during the euphoria phase, they’re built in the quiet that precedes it.

The Counter-Cyclical Foundation of Category-Defining Products

At ChangeNOW, my team has noticed something consistent, the moments when the market contracts most brutally are almost always the ones where the infrastructure that ends up mattering gets built. Projects running on narrative and hype disappear, and the teams left standing are the ones genuinely solving engineering problems. At the same time, user acquisition costs collapse across every channel, paid, organic, partnerships, because nobody is fighting for attention anymore. 

But the most important change is on the client side. The users who stick around aren’t just looking, they’re auditing and they stop spreading volume across five providers and start consolidating around the one or two that can actually prove they’re reliable. 

DeFi tends to get held up as the textbook example, but the details actually matter more than the headline. In 2018, the ICO market froze, total market cap collapsed over 80%, and regulators across the US, China, and South Korea were rolling out coordinated enforcement. By any ordinary measure, it was a terrible time to build anything. We launched ChangeNOW the year before and had no intention of letting a market crisis slow us down.  Yet Uniswap deployed its mainnet contract in November of that year, Compound went live that September, and Aave was finishing its pivot from ETHLend in that same stretch. 

Nobody was following a narrative because there simply wasn’t one. They were working through unglamorous, specific problems: how to algorithmically price liquidity without an order book, how to manage collateral ratios programmatically, and how to settle cross-asset swaps without a central clearing counterparty. When risk appetite returned in 2020, those protocols had no need to introduce themselves.

Trust Ruptures Are Structural, Not Cyclical

The collapse of FTX in November 2022 was not simply a financial loss event. It was a rupture in the operational assumption that a centralized custodian could be treated as a neutral utility. When institutional and retail clients discovered that their assets had been treated as an unsecured liability on a proprietary trading desk’s balance sheet, the damage extended far beyond the immediate counterparties. It contaminated the risk assessment framework for every centralized intermediary.

Market data confirms that this was not a short-term emotional spike. More and more users refused to give up control of their keys.Hardware wallet providers didn’t need quarterly reports to know something had changed: between June 2022 and February 2023, our partner Ledger sold 1 million devices. The same urgency appeared on-chain. Exchange-to-wallet flows spiked right after FTX, and again in March 2023 when hourly CEX outflows reached $1.2 billion. By 2025 these weren’t one-off reactions. Non-custodial wallets were the default for 59% of users globally, and self-custody awareness had climbed to 71%.

The non-custodial wallet market itself reached $1.38 billion in 2025, with nearly 68% of cryptocurrency users preferring self-custody solutions and 61% of DeFi participants relying on non-custodial wallets to interact with blockchain platforms DEX spot volume as a share of total spot volume went from about 6% in 2021 to 21.2% by the close of 2025, and derivatives followed a comparable trajectory from 2.1% to 11.7%. 

Zoom out far enough and something becomes hard to miss. Crypto’s major crises have a track record of producing entire new categories of infrastructure, not just cleaning up the old ones. The Mt. Gox collapse in 2014 gave the industry regulated exchanges with proof-of-reserves and on-chain audit trails. The ICO bust of 2018 gave it DeFi and composable liquidity protocols. Now, in the aftermath of FTX and the banking scares of 2022–2023, what’s taking shape is a wave of non-custodial wallets, DEX aggregators, and privacy-preserving compliance tools. 

So crises don’t suppress innovation in crypto infrastructure; they reroute it directly into the vulnerabilities the preceding bull market chose to ignore.

What Wins in Prolonged Instability

Based on the demand patterns my team tracks across our partner base, like wallets, payment gateways, neobanks, institutional trading desks, I would isolate five categories that absorb volume when the market contracts.

  1. Non-custodial settlement tools.
    This is the most direct response to the trust rupture described above. Swap services, payment processors, and wallet infrastructure that never hold user funds on their own balance sheet remove the custodian risk from the equation. In a market where the question “who holds the keys?” has become a formal part of procurement checklists, non-custodial architecture shifts from a differentiator to a baseline requirement.
  2. Infrastructure APIs and embedded finance rails.
    Traditional fintech companies and brokers that spent 2021-2022 exploring crypto are now executing. The economics rule out proprietary blockchain stacks. Instead, the work revolves around integrating APIs: liquidity aggregation, cross-chain settlement, fiat on/off-ramps. The value here is abstraction: hiding the complexity of route optimization, gas management, and chain reorgs behind a single endpoint that behaves like a conventional payment rail.
  3. Payment solutions for volatile economies.
    This is a category that grows inversely with the stability of local fiat currencies and capital control regimes. When individuals and businesses in Argentina, Turkey, or Nigeria face accelerating devaluation, crypto ceases to be a speculative asset and becomes a liquidity preservation tool. The infrastructure that serves this demand, fast swap execution, local payment method integration, stablecoin access, operates on fundamentals that are decoupled from broader crypto market sentiment.
  4. Privacy and control-oriented tools.
    The experience of having funds frozen, withdrawn, or haircut on a centralized platform has a lasting behavioral effect. Users who previously accepted custodial convenience as the default begin to value key sovereignty, transaction privacy, and data autonomy. This is not a niche ideological preference; it is a rational risk response that persists long after the precipitating event.
  5. Compliance infrastructure that does not break the user experience.
    Across every major jurisdiction, AML, KYT, sanctions screening, and travel rule requirements are hardening,  there is no ambiguity about where the regulatory trajectory points. The real differentiator is whether compliance infrastructure can be built without breaking the user experience. The providers that win are those that can execute these checks without introducing latency that destroys conversion or creates settlement risk for time-sensitive operations. In my team’s audits of partner swap receipts from competing providers, we have repeatedly found that AML holds were being used as a cover for spread expansion, a hidden “compliance tax” that the provider embeds into the rate. A professional infrastructure must execute compliance as an operational function, not a margin lever.

The Infrastructure Already Exists

On the surface, the building blocks look straightforward – swap, payment flow, on-ramp. Underneath, each one demands years of engineering and carries a serious risk of failure. The difficulty lives in the details product teams rarely discuss, things like liquidity is scattered across dozens of chains, routing cannot ignore MEV, gas tokens need managing across L1s and L2s, AML screening must track ever-changing global sanctions lists, and settlement has to work across asynchronous networks. None of these problems improve the end product, they are simply the cost of being in the game.

The market has matured to the point where this infrastructure is available as a service. For a wallet, a brokerage, or a payment company launching a crypto feature, the build-or-buy decision should be resolved in favor of buy unless the core business is infrastructure provision itself. The lead time compresses from years to weeks. The operational risk shifts from the product team to the infrastructure provider, who is contractually bound to uptime, rate integrity, and settlement finality. In my experience, the teams that internalize this reality early capture the window of opportunity that a bear market creates. The ones that insist on building from scratch typically ship too late to matter.

At ChangeNOW, our B2B infrastructure is designed for exactly this environment. We provide API access to liquidity across 1,500+ crypto assets, a guaranteed 99.99% uptime architecture, and a settlement model in which the amount shown on the confirmation screen is the amount that arrives on-chain, no hidden spread manipulation, no compliance tax embedded in the rate, no post-execution deductions labeled as “network adjustments.” We have operated through multiple cycles, and our commercial architecture reflects the lessons of each: transparency as a contractual obligation, not a marketing claim.

For teams building wallets, exchanges, payment gateways, or any product that requires reliable cross-chain swap execution, we have opened a Fast-Track program that compresses integration from first contact to production deployment. If your roadmap includes a crypto feature that cannot afford to launch late, I would suggest we talk now, while the market is still quiet. The products that ship in this environment are the ones that lead in the next. Everything else is just preparation for a cycle that has already passed.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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