Crypto markets follow recognizable cycles — periods of extreme euphoria followed by crushing despair, then quiet accumulation until the next boom.
Understanding these cycles is the most valuable skill you can learn as a crypto investor. It helps you buy when others are fearful and sell when others are greedy.
The Four Phases of a Crypto Cycle
Every market cycle has four phases, originally described by Richard Wyckoff in the 1930s for stock markets. They apply perfectly to crypto.
Phase 1: Accumulation
After a long bear market, prices have been crushed. Sentiment is at rock bottom. Media has declared crypto dead. Most retail investors have sold in despair.
Smart money — institutions, whales, experienced traders — starts buying quietly. Prices stabilize. Volume is low.
Signs:
- Weeks or months of sideways price action
- Low trading volume
- Negative or indifferent news coverage
- “Crypto is dead” headlines
- Low volatility (the “boring” phase)
Duration: 6-18 months
Phase 2: Markup (Bull Market)
The accumulation phase ends when the smart money has filled their positions. Price starts to rise. The first movers take notice.
As price breaks out to new highs, media attention returns. Retail investors start buying. FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) kicks in. New all-time highs are reached.
Signs:
- Price breaks out of the accumulation range
- Volume increases significantly
- Positive news coverage returns
- New all-time highs
- Altcoins outperforming Bitcoin (“alt season”)
- Friends and family start asking about crypto
Duration: 6-12 months
Phase 3: Distribution
The smart money starts selling their positions to the latecomers. Price action becomes choppy — making new highs, then dropping sharply, then recovering.
This phase is characterized by divergences. The price might make a higher high, but volume is lower. Altcoins that led the rally are now falling harder than Bitcoin.
Signs:
- Choppy price action with sharp drops and recoveries
- Lower volume on up moves, higher volume on down moves
- “Buy the dip” mentality — every drop is eagerly bought
- Celebrity endorsements and mainstream adoption headlines
- Increasing regulatory warnings and crackdowns
Duration: 3-6 months
Phase 4: Markdown (Bear Market)
The distribution phase ends when the smart money has fully exited. Price breaks below key support levels. Panic selling begins.
Margin calls trigger cascading liquidations. Projects that raised during the bull run run out of money. Companies declare bankruptcy. Exchanges collapse.
Signs:
- Sustained price declines with high volume
- Breaking below key moving averages (200-day, etc.)
- Capitulation events (flash crashes, 30-50% drops in days)
- Layoffs at crypto companies
- Exchange collapses and hacks
- Media declares crypto dead
- Extreme fear (Crypto Fear & Greed Index below 20)
Duration: 12-24 months
The Bitcoin Halving Cycle
Bitcoin’s price cycles are strongly correlated with the halving — an event every 4 years that cuts the block reward in half.
| Halving | Date | Pre-Halving Price | Cycle Peak | Peak vs Pre-Halving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Nov 2012 | $12 | $1,100 (Dec 2013) | 90x |
| 2nd | July 2016 | $650 | $19,700 (Dec 2017) | 30x |
| 3rd | May 2020 | $8,600 | $69,000 (Nov 2021) | 8x |
| 4th | Apr 2024 | $63,000 | ? | ? |
The pattern: the halving creates a supply shock (fewer new coins entering circulation). Combined with rising demand, this pushes prices higher. The peak typically occurs 12-18 months after the halving.
The Altcoin Cycle
Altcoins tend to follow Bitcoin but with more extreme moves:
- Early bull — Bitcoin dominates. Altcoins lag. The Bitcoin Dominance index rises.
- Mid bull — Bitcoin makes new highs. Top altcoins (ETH, SOL) start catching up.
- Late bull — Bitcoin dominance drops. “Alt season” begins. Mid-cap altcoins explode.
- Mania — Micro-cap altcoins, meme coins, and new projects do 100x+. This signals the top.
- Bear — All altcoins crash harder than Bitcoin. Most never recover.
How to Position Yourself Through the Cycle
Accumulation Phase
- Do: Dollar-cost average into Bitcoin and top altcoins. Build your portfolio.
- Don’t: Wait for “just one more dip.” You will miss the bottom.
- Mindset: This is when fortunes are made. Be patient.
Markup Phase
- Do: Hold your core positions. Take profits on your most speculative bets.
- Don’t: FOMO into projects you don’t understand because they’re pumping.
- Mindset: Enjoy the ride, but start planning your exit.
Distribution Phase
- Do: Take profits aggressively. Move to stablecoins. Reduce leverage.
- Don’t: Reinvest all profits back into crypto. Keep your gains.
- Mindset: Bulls make money, bears make money, pigs get slaughtered.
Markdown Phase
- Do: Wait. Do nothing. Let the bear market run its course.
- Don’t: Try to catch falling knives. Don’t leverage.
- Mindset: This too shall pass. The next accumulation phase will come.
Tools to Track Market Cycles
- Crypto Fear & Greed Index — Extreme fear = buy zone. Extreme greed = sell zone.
- Bitcoin Dominance — Track rotation between BTC and altcoins.
- Pi Cycle Top Indicator — Historically accurate at identifying market tops.
- MVRV Ratio — Market Value to Realized Value. High = overvalued. Low = undervalued.
- Puell Multiple — Bitcoin miner revenue. High = cycle top signals.
Verdict
Crypto market cycles are real and predictable. The four phases — accumulation, markup, distribution, markdown — repeat every 4 years, driven by the Bitcoin halving.
The key to success is simple but hard to execute: buy during accumulation when everyone is fearful, sell during distribution when everyone is greedy, and wait through the bear market.
Most people lose money because they buy during the mania phase (when they hear about crypto from friends) and sell during the capitulation phase (when they can’t handle the losses).
Don’t be most people.
Related: How to Read a Crypto Chart | What Is DCA? Dollar-Cost Averaging | Is Bitcoin Still Worth Buying in 2026? | Crypto Narratives for 2026
BitcoinTalk has documented every market cycle since 2011. The “Speculation” and “Trading Discussion” boards capture the sentiment at each phase. Reading old threads from 2014, 2018, and 2022 bear markets is a powerful reminder that “this too shall pass.”