In the past, Bitcoin was often on the agenda with sharp losses in value following sudden increases. The record levels reached in previous cycles were followed by prices falling by 80-90 percent. However, it is noteworthy that these decline rates have decreased significantly in recent years.
Institutional interest and change in market structure
The recent decline in Bitcoin price has been limited compared to the serious pullbacks seen in previous years. This development indicates that Bitcoin has achieved a more stable structure as an investment tool. The increased interest of institutional investors in the market led to a decrease in price volatility. Jason Fernandes is known as one of the co-founders of AdLunam, who conducts various analyzes on the cryptocurrency market. According to Fernandes, increased liquidity and the participation of large investors have made price fluctuations more limited, both on the rise and fall. In such an environment, discussions no longer focus on the future or reliability of Bitcoin, but on its ideal weight in portfolios.
Analyst Zack Wainwright, working at Fidelity Digital Assets, also pointed out that Bitcoin is starting to mature and extreme price movements are gradually decreasing. According to Wainwright, price pullbacks have been more moderate in the last cycle than in the past. Going back in time, losses after the 2013 and 2017 peaks caused investors to face long-term losses. However, the decline in the last cycle was not as deep as before.
Different opinions from analysts and portfolio impact
Although the view that Bitcoin has left the sharp declines behind has gained weight, some experts are cautious about whether this situation will be permanent. Mike McGlone from Bloomberg Intelligence team argues that Bitcoin may lose serious value again. According to McGlone, it is possible that a large-scale correction in global financial markets will have the same impact on crypto assets. In contrast, Jason Fernandes is of the view that the current market scale makes it difficult to suffer losses as deep as in the old days. In addition to Bitcoin’s capital size, the increase in institutional investor density on stock exchanges also helps prevent sudden and large sales waves.
Integrating Bitcoin into portfolios ushers in a new era for both individual and institutional investors. According to Fernandes, portfolio analysis shows that even when a low share is given to Bitcoin, the risk does not increase significantly and the total return increases. Thus, the role of cryptocurrency in the portfolio becomes a complementary element that increases efficiency rather than short-term speculative transactions.
Fernandes states that holding Bitcoin is no longer considered the main risk, the main risk is to stay away completely. Especially for large investors, allocating a certain share to Bitcoin within their portfolio diversity is evaluated from a broader perspective.
A study published by Fidelity reveals that Bitcoin has stood out among various asset classes, especially in the last 10 years. The research stated that Bitcoin outperformed traditional instruments such as stocks, gold and bonds in terms of both return and relative risk.
On the other hand, another consequence of these developments comes to the fore. As the Bitcoin market grows and matures, average returns are expected to decrease to a more balanced level as price fluctuations decrease. High returns in earlier periods came with extreme volatility; Today, its function in portfolios is evolving into a cautious and sustainable structure.


