August 20, 2025 – SignalMarket News
Crypto bear market timing is never obvious in real time, but cycles rhyme. Liquidity, macro policy (Fed/ECB), Bitcoin’s halving cadence, and investor positioning tend to drive the turn. Below you’ll find the key timelines, tripwires, and a practical checklist to spot the shift before it’s obvious.
Where are we in the cycle?
- We’re in the post-halving window (the last halving was in 2024). Historically, crypto tops often form 12–18 months after a halving, then markets transition into distribution and, later, a bear phase.
- 2025 has featured ETF flows, AI-themed risk appetite, and broad alt participation—all late-cycle characteristics. None guarantees a top, but they raise the odds of choppier conditions and rolling peaks.
Three plausible timelines for a 2025–26 turn
1) Rolling top in Q3–Q4 2025
Distribution sets in: BTC down 20–35% from highs while alts drop 50–70%, then a prolonged range. This path fits the halving window and a “soft-landing” macro.
2) Blow-off then fast bear in late-2025 / early-2026
A final vertical push (alt season), euphoric funding, then a sharp break that starts the bear quickly.
3) Early bear on macro shock (any time)
A hawkish Fed pivot, recession signals, regulatory shock, or a major exchange/issuer failure flips risk-off early.
No single path is “the” forecast. Treat these as scenarios—and manage risk with triggers, not opinions.
Bear-market tripwires to watch
Use these as leading indicators. A cluster of triggers matters more than any single one.
- Trend breaks
- BTC closes below the 200-day MA for ≥3 weeks, and the 20-week MA rolls over.
- Total crypto market cap breaks and stays below its 40-week average.
- Liquidity pulse turns
- Stablecoin supply (USDT/USDC) shrinks >3% in 30 days or >5% in 60 days.
- Net ETF flows (BTC/ETH) turn negative for 4+ consecutive weeks.
- Breadth deterioration
- BTC dominance rises while total market cap falls (flight to quality).
- Fewer than 25% of top-100 alts above their 200-DMA.
- Derivatives stress
- Funding flips negative across majors with falling open interest (de-risking), or
- Perp/futures basis <2% annualized for weeks (risk appetite drained).
- On-chain cooling
- MVRV / NUPL roll over from elevated zones; spent output profit ratio (SOPR) trends <1.0 on rallies (distribution).
- Exchange net inflows turn positive for BTC/ETH >$2B per week (profit-taking supply).
- Miner pressure
- Hash-price/miner revenue slumps to post-halving lows and miners increase exchange transfers.
Rule of thumb: If 4+ of these 10 flags trigger together, treat the market as late cycle/high risk. If 6+ trigger, assume the bear has likely started unless proven otherwise.
What a bear usually looks like (playbook)
- Phase 1 – Distribution: choppy range near highs, alt underperformance, failed breakouts.
- Phase 2 – Breakdown: BTC loses 200-DMA/200-WMA, correlations rise, alts slide faster.
- Phase 3 – Capitulation & base: volumes spike on red days, funding deeply negative, on-chain profit/loss resets.
Strategy notes (not financial advice)
- Position sizing: reduce leverage, prioritize BTC/ETH over thin-liquidity alts in late cycle.
- Define invalidation: pre-commit to levels/time-based exits rather than emotional decisions.
- DCA discipline: bear phases can last quarters; plan accumulation schedules, not knife-catching.
- Diversify signals: mix price, flows (stablecoins/ETFs), derivatives, and on-chain—not just chart patterns.
FAQ
When does a crypto bear market usually start after a halving?
Historically within 12–18 months post-halving—but macro/liquidity can pull it forward or push it back.
Will ETFs stop a bear market?
They can dampen drawdowns if flows stay positive, but sustained outflows or shrinking stablecoin supply usually outweigh them.
Do alts always fall more?
Typically yes: beta >1 to BTC on the way down, especially those with low liquidity or unclear cash-flow models.