2025 has once again exceeded expectations in the crypto market. The total market capitalization of crypto assets for the year first surpassed $4 trillion, with Bitcoin reaching a new all-time high. However, behind this impressive performance, some contradictory phenomena are hidden.
Data shows that the market ultimately declined by about 7.9%, significantly affected by macroeconomic uncertainties. On one hand, US spot ETFs continued to attract capital, with net inflows exceeding $21 billion, demonstrating strong institutional investor interest. On the other hand, the number of on-chain active addresses for Bitcoin decreased by 16% year-over-year, forming a stark contrast.
This reflects Bitcoin's current unique characteristics of "strong asset attributes, weak on-chain activity." In simple terms, more and more funds are treating Bitcoin as an asset allocation tool rather than actively using and trading it. The popularity of ETFs is a concrete manifestation of this trend—institutions and retail investors hold Bitcoin exposure through ETFs instead of direct on-chain interactions.
Looking ahead to 2026, this divergence may continue to evolve. Macroeconomic uncertainties will remain a significant factor influencing the market, but the position of crypto assets in global asset allocation is steadily rising. The key question is whether more practical applications can drive a recovery in on-chain activity, which will determine whether the entire ecosystem can achieve more balanced development.
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2025 has once again exceeded expectations in the crypto market. The total market capitalization of crypto assets for the year first surpassed $4 trillion, with Bitcoin reaching a new all-time high. However, behind this impressive performance, some contradictory phenomena are hidden.
Data shows that the market ultimately declined by about 7.9%, significantly affected by macroeconomic uncertainties. On one hand, US spot ETFs continued to attract capital, with net inflows exceeding $21 billion, demonstrating strong institutional investor interest. On the other hand, the number of on-chain active addresses for Bitcoin decreased by 16% year-over-year, forming a stark contrast.
This reflects Bitcoin's current unique characteristics of "strong asset attributes, weak on-chain activity." In simple terms, more and more funds are treating Bitcoin as an asset allocation tool rather than actively using and trading it. The popularity of ETFs is a concrete manifestation of this trend—institutions and retail investors hold Bitcoin exposure through ETFs instead of direct on-chain interactions.
Looking ahead to 2026, this divergence may continue to evolve. Macroeconomic uncertainties will remain a significant factor influencing the market, but the position of crypto assets in global asset allocation is steadily rising. The key question is whether more practical applications can drive a recovery in on-chain activity, which will determine whether the entire ecosystem can achieve more balanced development.