Recent price action presents a conflicting signal to digital asset investors. Since early November, Bitcoin has retraced 12.9%, while Solana hascorrected 17.5%. For market participants conditioned by historical volatility, these double-digit declines often serve as a warning sign that the cycle has exhausted its momentum.
Despite recent price volatility, capital allocation tells a different story. US spot Bitcoin ETFs haveattracted $22.47 billion in net inflows YTD, a figure that counters the bearish narrative. The volume suggests the market is pausing for consolidation rather than tipping into a multi-year decline. This specific friction between price action and flow data drove the agenda atBinance Blockchain Week Dubai 2025. During the event, Real Vision Co-Founder and CEO Raoul Pal argued against the industry’s fixation on the rigid four-year cycle.
“This four-year cycle handed down from Satoshi isn’t some law of nature. Liquidity drives this market—and global liquidity is about to surge,” Pal stated during his keynote, framing the current environment not as an end, but as a prelude to a liquidity-driven expansion in 2026.
The Four-Year Market Cycle Theory
The prevailing mental model for most crypto investors remains the Satoshi cycle, which dictates that markets move in rigid four-year intervals centered around Bitcoin’s halving events.
Historically, this model predicts a parabolic peak roughly 12 to 18 months post-halving, followed by a punishing bear market. Proponents of this theory point to the current exhaustion in speculative assets as evidence that the top is in. NFT sales volume, often a proxy for retail risk appetite, has collapsed 65.73% in the last 30 days to just $312.17 million. When speculative froth evaporates to this degree, it typically signals that retail capital has exited the building.
Liquidity hasn’t left the building; it just moved. With stablecoin market capitalizationreaching $312.63 billion, up 49.17% this year, the ecosystem is holding significant dry powder. This surge suggests investors are effectively moving to cash equivalents on-chain rather than withdrawing to traditional bank accounts. The resulting stockpile of stable assets acts as waiting leverage, primed to re-enter the market when conditions shift.
Pal noted at Binance Blockchain Week that deep sentiment resets, such as the 50% Bitcoin correction in mid-2021, often occur within ongoing bull markets rather than marking their conclusion. The current washed-out sentiment may be a technical reset necessary to sustain a longer-duration cycle.
Macroeconomic Drivers Signaling a Liquidity-Led Expansion
Pal’s primary contention is that global M2 money supply and central bank balance sheets have a 90% correlation with Bitcoin’s price performance, vastly superseding the supply shock of the halving. He outlined specific catalysts set to activate in early 2026 that could force a liquidity expansion regardless of the Fed’s immediate interest rate decisions. These include anticipated fiscal stimulus packages from the US administration and critical adjustments to banking leverage rules, specifically the Supplementary Leverage Ratio.
Modifying SLR requirements would allow commercial banks to hold larger quantities of sovereign debt without punitive capital requirements. Pal emphasized the significance of this obscure regulatory shift: “Lowering risk weights on Treasuries lets banks buy unlimited amounts of bonds. That is liquidity creation. That’s fuel.”
Beyond banking mechanics, the rotation into altcoins is historically correlated with the business cycle, specifically when theISM Manufacturing Index crosses 50. Pal argues that altcoins trade like small-cap equities, requiring a risk-on macro environment to outperform. Once the ISM index turns positive alongside fiscal stimulus, capital typically rotates aggressively down the risk curve.
Institutional behavior currently supports this accumulation thesis. Public companies nowhold 1.076 million BTC, creating a supply shock that differs mechanically from retail FOMO. Pal advises investors to benchmark performance against major Layer 1 networks with real traction, specifically noting Solana and the rapid network growth of Sui. The disconnect between these fundamentals and current price action is what Pal identifies as a market dislocation.
“How can this be a bear market when almost no assets went to new highs yet? This is a correction—the main cycle hasn’t even happened,” Pal argued, suggesting the recent drawdown is a consolidation phase within a larger supercycle structure.
Will 2026 Be the Year of the Crypto Supercycle?
If the traditional four-year cycle is indeed breaking, 2026 may not bring a crypto winter, but rather a liquidity explosion driven by fiscal dominance and regulatory unlocking. The total crypto market capremains resilient at $3.27 trillion, suggesting the asset class has matured beyond simple boom-and-bust mechanics into a permanent fixture of the global financial system.
Pal closed his session atBinance Blockchain Week with a nod to the event’s branding, predicting 2026 would be the “Year of the Yellow Fruit”—a “banana zone” of vertical price expansion driven by thedebasement of fiat currency. However, capturing this upside requires discipline over speculation.
The opening months of 2026 will serve as the proving ground for this thesis. If macro liquidity indicators turn upward as predicted, the current market correction will likely be viewed in hindsight not as a cycle top, but as the final accumulation opportunity before the supercycle begins.
This article was written by IL Contributors at investinglive.com.
