Bitcoin’s latest market cycle has entered a new phase, with onchain and derivatives data pointing to demand exhaustion and a transition into bear market territory, according to CryptoQuant’s latest Crypto Weekly Report.
After multiple demand-driven rallies since 2023, the firm says the structural pillars that supported higher prices are now weakening.
CryptoQuant’s analysis shows that Bitcoin demand growth has decisively slowed since early October 2025, falling below its long-term trend.
The current cycle featured three major spot demand waves: the launch of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, optimism surrounding the U.S. presidential election outcome, and a surge of interest from Bitcoin Treasury Companies.
With these catalysts largely priced in, incremental demand has diminished, removing a key source of price support that previously sustained upward momentum.
The firm notes that when demand growth rolls over in this manner, it has historically marked the end of bullish phases, regardless of broader narratives around supply shocks or halving events.
Institutional behavior is now reinforcing the bearish signal. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have shifted from accumulation to distribution in the fourth quarter of 2025, with net holdings declining by approximately 24,000 BTC. This stands in stark contrast to Q4 2024, when ETFs were strong net buyers and a central driver of market strength.
At the same time, onchain data shows that addresses holding between 100 and 1,000 BTC—often associated with ETFs, funds, and corporate treasuries—are growing below historical trend.
CryptoQuant compares this pattern to late 2021, when similar demand deterioration preceded the 2022 bear market.
Derivatives data adds further confirmation. Funding rates in perpetual futures, measured using a 365-day moving average, have declined to their lowest level since December 2023. Falling funding rates typically indicate reduced willingness among traders to maintain leveraged long positions.
Historically, such conditions have been more consistent with bear market regimes than bull phases, reflecting declining risk appetite and lower conviction among market participants.
From a technical perspective, Bitcoin has broken below its 365-day moving average, a key long-term indicator that has historically separated bull and bear market conditions.
CryptoQuant stresses that Bitcoin’s four-year cycle is driven primarily by demand expansions and contractions rather than the halving itself.