The “Supercycle” is dead. What was promised to be the inevitable march to $200,000 has ended not with a bang, but with a mechanical, humiliating breakdown. As Bitcoin spiraled well below $90,000 this week—erasing the entirety of its 2025 gains—the market was forced to confront a reality that critics have shouted into the void for years: without cheap money and regulatory hype, the “King of Crypto” has no clothes.
ISTANBUL, TURKEY – NOVEMBER 08: Gold Bitcoins are seen in the window of a Bitcoin and cryptocurrency exchange office on November 08, 2024 in Istanbul, Turkey. Bitcoin has soared to new record highs nearing 77,000 in the days after Donald Trump’s re-election and on his campaign promise to support Bitcoin and the cryptocurrency market. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
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On November 17, as prices sliced through critical support levels, notorious crypto skeptic Peter Schiff didn’t just take a victory lap; he delivered a eulogy for the “store of value” narrative. With gold hitting all-time highs while Bitcoin faltered, Schiff declared: “Bitcoin’s collapse relative to gold exposes the digital-gold hype as a fraud.”
For the first time in this cycle, the data suggests that he might be right. The crash of late 2025 wasn’t a random fluctuation; it was a rational reaction to a perfect storm of broken promises.
Here’s what ultimately unraveled the bull run—not a clean chain of events, but a set of overlapping pressures that built on each other:
- Tariff-driven inflation forced the Federal Reserve to freeze rate cuts.
- Tech billionaires exited Nvidia, signaling the end of the AI trade.
- The SEC chose strict rules over amnesty; the Bitcoin Reserve bill died.
- ETFs panic-sold as prices dipped below their $90k cost basis.
The Trap: The Macro Betrayal
The seeds of the collapse were sown not on the blockchain, but in the real economy. The entire 2025 bull thesis rested on a single assumption: that the Federal Reserve would aggressively cut rates to offset economic weakness. That assumption died in late October.
Data from the St. Louis Fed revealed a harsh truth: new tariff policies were driving inflation back up, accounting for nearly 11% of headline inflation. This trapped the Federal Reserve. Minutes released on November 19 showed a “strongly divided” committee, effectively freezing the liquidity tap. Bitcoin, which functions less like digital gold and more like a leveraged bet on liquidity, was suddenly starving for oxygen.
The Signal: When “Smart Money” Left the Room
While retail investors were still meme-ing about “Uptober,” the most sophisticated players in technology were heading for the exits. The “canary in the coal mine” wasn’t a crypto metric; it was Nvidia.
In mid-November, regulatory filings revealed that Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund and Softbank had sold their entire stakes in the AI chipmaker. The message was deafening: the “exponential tech” trade had peaked. Bitcoin, which had spent the year trading in lockstep with AI stocks as a proxy for “future tech,” was guilty by association. When Thiel cashed out of the future, the algorithmic trading bots that link crypto to tech stocks initiated a sell program that hasn’t stopped since.
The Regulatory Rug Pull
The final psychological blow came from the very people crypto investors believed were their saviors. The industry had convinced itself that the new administration and SEC Chair Paul Atkins would grant blanket amnesty to the sector.
Instead, on November 12, Atkins delivered the “Project Crypto” speech—a cold splash of water that prioritized strict “token taxonomy” over deregulation. Simultaneously, the “BITCOIN Act of 2025″—the legislative dream that the U.S. government would buy $100 billion of Bitcoin—died a quiet death in committee. The “sovereign bid” was a fantasy. When the market realized the U.S. government wasn’t coming to buy their bags, the speculative premium evaporated instantly. Without regulatory tailwinds or a credible sovereign buyer, the entire bull case was built on misread political signals rather than real policy momentum.
The Flush: The $90,000 Death Spiral
The collapse eventually turned mechanical. As the narrative crumbled, price drifted down to the $89,600 level—the average cost basis for the massive Spot ETFs launched earlier this year.
This was the breaking point. When Bitcoin crossed this line, billions of dollars in institutional capital went “underwater.” Risk management models at major funds triggered automatic sell orders to stop the bleeding, leading to over $2.3 billion in ETF outflows in a single week. The institutional wall of money that was supposed to protect Bitcoin actually accelerated the crash, proving that Wall Street is a fair-weather friend.
What Comes Next: The “Winter” of 2026?
The damage inflicted in November 2025 is structural, not just technical. The “Four Year Cycle” that predicts a peak in late 2025 has been broken, consistent with the “Left Translated” theory that suggests the top is already in.
Looking ahead, the outlook offers a glimmer of volatility for traders but significant risk for holders:
- The $80,000 Floor: BitMEX founder Arthur Hayes predicts that without new liquidity, Bitcoin could slide further to the $80,000–$85,000 range, a zone where deep value buyers might finally step in.
- Miner Capitulation: Watch the miners. With prices falling and hashrate remaining high, inefficient miners are now operating at a loss. A wave of bankruptcies or shutdowns is likely the next shoe to drop, which typically marks the final flush before a bottom.
- The Liquidity Wait: The only potential savior is a reversal by the Fed. Hayes and other macro analysts argue that only increased liquidity—a reversal by the U.S. Federal Reserve—could provide substantial upside for Bitcoin, but likely not until Q1 2026.
Until then, the market remains in a “no man’s land,” trapped between a failed narrative and a hostile macroeconomic reality. The “Digital Gold” facade has cracked; now investors are just holding a volatile asset in a risk-off world.
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