2029 Finale Prediction: When Cryptocurrency Completely "Vanishes", Who Can Remain in This Financial Upheaval?

marsbitPublié le 2026-06-16Dernière mise à jour le 2026-06-16

Résumé

By 2029, the crypto industry will have transformed into a largely invisible but foundational layer for traditional finance. This timeline outlines the key shifts from now until then. By mid-2026, the most sought-after assets on-chain will not be traditional tokens, but synthetic perpetual contracts for private, high-growth companies (like SpaceX, OpenAI). These become primary price discovery tools, highlighting the market's craving for real-world asset value. Most altcoins enter a sustained bear market as their fundamental lack of asset-backed value is exposed. In late 2026, the "AI + Crypto" narrative largely fades as AI giants prove they don't need crypto infrastructure, except for prediction markets betting on model performance. Simultaneously, a quiet but significant wave of tokenization for institutional assets (money market funds, private credit) begins. The industry splits into a noisy speculative economy and a silent institutional one. Throughout 2027, major public blockchain foundations pivot decisively to serve institutional clients, building compliance toolkits and sales teams. However, key sectors hit growth ceilings: private perpetual contracts are legally restricted from public promotion, stable币 growth is capped by looming political uncertainty, and tokenization projects remain cautious. In 2028, following a U.S. election assumed to maintain a regulatory (not prohibitive) stance, a pivotal change occurs. After a major liquidation crisis exposes the flaws of...

Authored by: Luke

Compiled by: Saoirse, Foresight News

You stand on the eve of the largest transformation in cryptocurrency history. If you want to continue delving deep into this industry, you must keep a close eye on everything happening right now.

Currently, there are three core problems in the entire industry:

  • What exactly determines the value of a token?
  • How to implement various cutting-edge technologies into the blockchain ecosystem?
  • When cryptocurrency is no longer an independent asset class but transforms into the underlying infrastructure of traditional finance, what will happen to the market?

I could simply analyze these three questions from a theoretical level; countless people do this every day, but empty theory can never yield a definitive conclusion. Therefore, I intend to take a different approach: systematically outlining the real changes the industry will undergo from the present to 2029 in stages. The article will specify concrete entities, data, and timelines, making the content tangible enough that we can revisit it in three years to verify the accuracy of my judgments. This is just one of many possible futures; some inferences will inevitably be wrong. But vague, hollow future predictions are non-falsifiable, and non-falsifiable opinions are worthless. I would rather give clear but potentially incorrect judgments than say ambiguous, risk-free platitudes that will never be proven wrong.

The perspective of this prediction stems from my work context: I have long been deeply involved in the intersection of crypto startups, industry regulation, and venture capital, having in-depth weekly conversations with alternative asset managers and capital allocators. This doesn't mean my judgments are necessarily correct, but my deductions fully consider the various real-world constraints.

Mid-2026: Premium Assets Are No Longer Various Tokens

By mid-2026, before the market has uniformly defined the value standard for tokens, the private company perpetual futures market has already achieved product-market fit.

This transformation began on the Hyperliquid platform. The SpaceX private perpetual futures contract launched on the platform was initially criticized due to Ventuals' malicious liquidation and price manipulation, but later became the most watched price reference for both primary and secondary markets. By July, major banks and hedge funds will reference this contract to price their privately held assets. Retail-facing trading apps like Robinhood will also use it to predict pre-IPO opening prices. In the weeks before a major company goes public, the price of this perpetual contract will accurately align with the final opening price, with a precision that embarrasses the investment bank underwriting teams charging seven-figure fees for pricing. The open interest for OpenAI and Anthropic perpetual contracts hit new highs. For a period, this native crypto exchange became the world's most reliable channel for obtaining real-time valuations of top-tier private companies.

Simultaneously, a fundamental question arises among ordinary traders: What justifies the continued trading of all other coins on-chain? The altcoin market has been in a continuous bear market for 18 months, with project founding teams and investment institutions exiting through large-scale OTC trades and time-sliced algorithmic selling. In contrast, $HYPE, the only token that has built a complete value capture loop, has outperformed all other market assets by a wide margin. Over a dozen token value capture mechanisms have been introduced to the industry, but most failed to form a positive feedback loop, rooted in the fact that the projects they were attached to held no asset value themselves. Ironically, the industry solved the technical problem of how tokens capture value before finding the tangible assets worth capturing value from.

This cart-before-the-horse state of the industry is the underlying driver behind the private perpetual futures frenzy. What the market truly craves has never been the perpetual futures product itself, but high-quality assets; and by mid-2026, the only high-quality assets tradable on-chain are synthetic exposure instruments to real-world companies with no inherent connection to crypto.

End of 2026: AI Sector Doesn't Need Cryptocurrency

Anthropic and OpenAI achieve technological breakthroughs, competition in the foundational large model space intensifies, and the market begins pricing in Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) in advance. The ensuing chain reaction is: capital continuously flows out from all non-top-tier foundational model companies. Capital begins viewing AGI as a core asset held on a company's balance sheet, not as a standardized tool for industry-wide adoption.

In such an environment, the "AI + Crypto" sector quietly fades into irrelevance. It's not that the logic was disproven, but that the industry has no time to debate it. The x402 payment protocol officially launches, but finds no paying users; the envisioned on-chain agent economy fails to achieve scale, with all existing agents settling in USD via API, no different from traditional software models. Consensus forms among venture capital circles: the AI industry itself does not need cryptocurrency as a backbone, and investors stop forcibly promoting this narrative.

The only "AI + Crypto" product that has truly achieved product-market fit at present is prediction markets. Trading volume around the performance of major foundational models grows rapidly, becoming the most precise financial instrument for betting on the core variable moving massive capital — which company will have the best-performing model next month.

Beyond the trading noise, another low-key transformation is underway: when the "CLARITY Act" passed the Senate in mid-2026, most traders considered it inconsequential, and the market saw no price rally; but by year-end, various asset tokenization projects accelerate. Large asset management institutions transition from pilot phases to full-scale operations, deliberately keeping a low profile — a core task for compliance departments is to avoid publicity. Tokenization targets focus on the mundane middle categories of balance sheets like money market funds and private credit. These assets have no KOLs hyping them on social media, no price charts to speculate on.

By the end of 2026, the crypto industry bifurcates into two almost separate economies: one noisy and vibrant, betting on AI sector movements for profits; the other silent and subdued, gradually being absorbed by the traditional financial system through compliance paperwork. The gaze of most industry participants focuses on the former market.

Early 2027: Major Public Blockchain Foundations Clarify Development Roadmaps

General-purpose public blockchains can no longer have it both ways with ambiguous positioning.

For years, major foundations have consistently told two completely separate stories: publicly promoting a vision of mass adoption for ordinary users, while privately pitching institutional adaptation services to firms. These two narratives never intersected. By early 2027, the contradiction between the two development paths becomes fully apparent.

The retail-facing sector is highly concentrated, with the only products with real user demand seeing all volume aggregated on a handful of trading platforms. The institutional business is the only sector currently bringing stable, paying clients. One by one, major foundations solidify their core development direction, with strikingly unified choices: building enterprise sales teams, providing compliance services, launching universal compliance development kits for tokenized asset transfer and broker-dealer licensing, expanding Wall Street partnerships, and enhancing privacy trading features.

Media and crypto social platforms interpret each strategic pivot as a trade-off: prioritizing institutions over retail, choosing serious finance over speculative casino attributes.

But internal foundation teams don't see it that way. Instead, they double down on crypto products for ordinary users, just with a different implementation logic. Accredited investor qualification thresholds have been steadily lowering for years, continuously expanding the eligible pool. The institutional infrastructure built by foundations will soon be accessible to ordinary users not currently classified as "accredited investors"; the infrastructure teams know this well but won't announce it publicly. Compliance infrastructure teams externally only discuss bank clients because banks are the current paying customers.

The subdued institutional market formed at the end of 2026 receives unprecedented incremental demand: future masses of ordinary, compliant investors. The previously separate economies finally connect via "accredited investor verification."

Mid to Late 2027: Triple Development Ceilings

A new generation of tech startups revitalizes the private market: sectors like AI-biotech fusion, embodied AI, and humanoid robotics see oversubscribed funding rounds, valuations skyrocket, but remain years away from IPO. Perpetual futures platforms list corresponding contracts within weeks, with the open interest for these companies with minimal revenue repeatedly setting new records. The 2026 market pattern repeats, with larger capital: the world's most sought-after premium assets are all concentrated in the private primary market, and the only corresponding instruments users can trade on-chain are synthetic perpetual contracts settling funding rates every 8 hours.

But three markets each hit growth ceilings, constraining industry speed:

Private Perpetual Futures Ceiling: Real private assets grow steadily via traditional private channels, compounding quarterly, completely invisible on crypto social platforms obsessed with pump narratives. Perpetual futures growth lags far behind real private assets, primarily constrained by the prohibition on general solicitation for private securities. Crypto's signature growth model — showcasing returns to attract retail — is legally inapplicable to these assets. Additionally, perpetual contracts have a structural flaw: they need near-term IPO events as price catalysts, covering only late-stage mature companies; they cannot offer synthetic contracts for mid-stage startups like biotech-AI or humanoid robotics, which are far from exit channels. For most primary market assets, the regulated, protected path of real equity is not a second-best option but the only legally viable trading instrument, albeit one that cannot be publicly advertised.

Stablecoin Ceiling: Stablecoin circulation continues its steady upward climb, never stopping expansion, but institutions quietly scale back growth plans. Midterm elections shift congressional committee power balances, the 2028 presidential candidate list takes shape, and several frontrunners publicly oppose private dollar token issuance. Although relevant bill provisions passed in 2025/2026 aren't repealed, enforcement authority belongs to the new administration. Bank treasurers formulating decade-long settlement plans must factor in the risk of stricter regulatory attitudes under the next government. The industry won't halt stablecoin projects entirely but will extend timelines and shrink pilot scales, with everyone awaiting the November 2028 election results. On-chain dollar velocity is completely tethered to policy uncertainty, which remains high by mid-2027.

Asset Tokenization Ceiling: This cautious sentiment permeates the entire institutional crypto market. Tokenized private credit and fund share products continue launching, all fully compliant, but institutions deliberately control scale, with no one wanting to become a Senate hearing case study the following year.

The commonality across these three sectors is clear: the product logic is sound, market demand validated, but external political forces tightly restrict growth speed. Setting aside crypto's own boom-and-bust standards, 2027 is actually a year of steady industry growth — it's just that the crypto industry has grown accustomed over a decade to viewing only vertical rallies as success.

2028: Compliance Access Ceases to Be Scarce

(Prediction precision decreases hereafter: earlier predictions specified quarters, post-2028 projections are annual, with correspondingly wider error margins. This article assumes a core premise: the Democratic candidate wins the November 2028 election. If the opposite occurs, event timings shift, but the overall development framework remains unchanged.)

Crypto's speculative casino attributes gradually fade, with almost no one pinpointing an exact inflection point. Market capital extraction mechanisms become too efficient; each wave of new liquidity from 2026-2027 is smaller than the last and extracted faster by a few top players. No landmark crash occurs; meme coin frenzies still appear intermittently with sharp intraday pumps, but after some point in the first half of 2028, speculation ceases to be the industry's core focus. Trading volume persists as a statistic but no longer dictates industry culture. Some traders migrate to prediction markets riding hype cycles; some remain in the shrinking speculative segment; and a significant number accomplish something no one foresaw in 2026 — obtaining accredited investor status over the past year.

Policy-related panic is gradually priced in by the market throughout the year. Leading candidates from both major parties accept industry donations, differing only in rhetoric, with unified core stance: the industry needs regulation, not an outright ban. Operators who exploited the previous administration's laxity as a harvest window face investigations. The industry slowly realizes regulatory cleanup is actually a positive signal: government distinguishes between predatory schemes and financial infrastructure, allowing capital to confidently flow into the latter. Bank treasurers who scaled back pilots in 2027 quietly resume expansion plans before the election; by the time results are in, most policy risk premium has been priced out.

The year's most profound lesson comes from the trading market everyone watches: early in the year, a large position on a top exchange, sizable enough to move markets, initiates concentrated liquidations across several popular private perpetual contracts. The chain-liquidation risk feared since the Ventuals manipulation event materializes fully. Within hours, billions in open interest are wiped out; automatic deleveraging triggers, losses shared by the market, and profitable parties see returns drastically reduced. Post-event, parties cannot determine if the volatility stemmed from malicious manipulation or mere market accident — and this ambiguity is itself the core conclusion: markets lacking an underlying physical anchor have no fair benchmark price; "market manipulation" cannot even be defined, let alone proven. Public company perpetuals have spot price constraints, but private perpetuals have no underlying anchor. Real private shares do have compliant trading channels, but large-scale public solicitation and broad price discovery are prohibited; each perpetual price is merely the platform's own estimate, leaving vast room for human intervention. This chain liquidation wasn't a failure of the synthetic contract market itself but the inevitable outcome of market mechanisms operating without underlying real asset support.

For a decade, the ban on general solicitation for private securities was framed as investor protection. This market blowup proves: the rule merely barred ordinary investors from legally protected trading channels, funneling them instead into high-leverage, anchorless synthetic contract markets. The real dividing line was never synthetic vs. real assets, but whether trading rights carry legally enforceable claims.

Post-blowup, new regulations emerge — less a reform than a refinement of financial plumbing: regulators issue guidance allowing public advertising of private securities secondary market transfers (limited to secondary shares, excluding primary fundraising) to verified accredited investors, a pool that has been expanding for years. The logic is straightforward: synthetic contract markets need a price anchor; the lowest-cost solution is opening public channels for real private assets. A 90-year-old advertising restriction is substantially relaxed merely to improve derivative markets.

The first week under new rules sees hype rivaling meme coin launches, with the sole difference being the traded asset is real company equity. Private secondary share listings, screenshot sharing, and community promotion all become legalized — a first for this asset class. Social media opinion polarizes: half the industry sees it as a new foundational financial tool; the other half fears retail becoming exit liquidity for VCs. The latter's instinct is correct but lags the times: that fear held when assets were vaporware tokens; but now, the traded assets are real company equity, proven over two years by perpetual markets to be what the entire market craves.

Capital first floods into late-stage mature companies already validated by perpetuals; and because real equity has no funding rates and no IPO time constraints, capital further flows into mid-stage startups perpetuals couldn't cover. Perpetual contracts don't die but transition into a supplementary segment for late-stage trading, no longer capturing the market's entire core attention.

By December, the industry enters a new bull market, fueled by the financial world's oldest foundational assets — now finally with a legal distribution channel.

2029: The Market Becomes the Industry's Sole Core Narrative

The first full year of this bull market unfolds completely differently from past crypto cycles, and this difference is the core value. Assets with sustained upward momentum are all tech companies with tangible business operations and real social value creation. The new foundational asset class ordinary users trade is private company equity: biotech firms completing multiple clinical trials, humanoid robotics companies everyone has seen live demos of, the AI labs whose perpetuals people traded in 2026 — now users can directly hold real company shares.

Accredited investor thresholds, gradually lowered over a decade, cultivate a new retail cohort; assets only accessible to institutions five years ago are now tradable by ordinary compliant investors, with most not even categorizing such trades as "crypto investing."

The token sector undergoes a final split along the core question posed at the article's outset: public chains that successfully transform into new market issuance and settlement infrastructure capture real business cash flow, their platform tokens becoming cash flow entitlement certificates. All other tokens face an extremely stark market rule: tokens lacking legally enforceable claims or complete value capture loops won't slowly bleed over 18 months like in 2026; they will directly and completely lose trading liquidity. The industry-wide debate over token value capture mechanisms from 2026 sees no single winner; the arrival of tradable private real assets simply renders the debate moot.

Stablecoins continue their cycle-long pattern: steady compound growth, no explosive rallies. By end-2029, circulation roughly doubles from mid-2027, averaging ~20% stable annual growth. The speed limit isn't lack of demand but a bipartisan policy choice: private dollar tokens develop moderately to meet utility needs while avoiding competition with sovereign monetary systems. On-chain dollar velocity is tethered to policy certainty, which is stable and long-term sustainable in 2029.

The speculative segment still exists, contracted into fixed niches, with occasional short-term frenzies, but overall influence equates to a sub-sector of the entertainment industry. Speculative traders disperse into prediction markets, the new private secondary market, and a path no one foresaw in 2026: obtaining accredited investor status.

The article's opening third core question — how crypto transforms into traditional financial infrastructure — is ultimately answered in a silent way: the question loses all relevance. Settlement functions rely on customized payment rails, public chains, or hybrid architectures; underlying technical details are understood only by operations teams. Ordinary participants neither know nor care, just as average people don't delve into their broker's clearinghouse. The industry integration that began in late 2026 culminates in landing via "complete invisibility." The ultimate victory of financial infrastructure is becoming mundane and unnoticed. What remains in the public eye is the core product crypto has been building through cycles of speculation all along — an asset trading market.

Thus, the three core questions are all answered via this deduction framework:

  • What determines token value? The timeless core: legally enforceable claims to real asset cash flows. The market now eliminates all tokens not meeting this condition.
  • How do cutting-edge technologies land on blockchain? They land via private primary/secondary markets: tech firms themselves don't need tokens, just trading channels; when channels gain legal public advertising rights, cutting-edge companies naturally achieve on-chain trading adoption.
  • What happens when crypto becomes traditional financial infrastructure? No landmark event occurs; underlying functions become fully abstracted, and the public never discusses this proposition separately again.

Some inferences herein will inevitably be off; this was stated upfront. The entire deduction framework has one core validation standard: if by end-2028, ordinary investors still lack legal channels to access private assets, with all capital flows reliant on offshore synthetic perpetuals and wrapped products, then this article's core thesis — "industry bottlenecks are legal, not technical" — fails, and the entire projection's credibility must be downgraded significantly.

Just watch that single core variable; by 2029, we can fully verify the rest. I would rather give clear, falsifiable predictions than never-wrong vague platitudes.

Questions liées

QAccording to the article's prediction, what becomes the primary high-quality asset for trading on-chain by mid-2026, and what is the key driver behind this shift?

ABy mid-2026, the primary high-quality assets for on-chain trading are perpetual futures contracts for private companies like SpaceX. The key driver is the market's underlying demand for quality assets, which are scarce within the crypto-native ecosystem, leading traders to seek synthetic exposure to real-world, valuable companies.

QWhat two nearly separate economies does the crypto industry split into by the end of 2026, as described in the article?

ABy the end of 2026, the crypto industry splits into two economies: a high-profile, noisy market focused on speculation and betting on AI sector performance via prediction markets, and a quiet, low-profile market focused on asset tokenization of traditional financial products like money market funds and private credit, which is being absorbed into the traditional financial system.

QWhat are the three market development ceilings encountered from mid to late 2027, and what is their common constraint?

AThe three ceilings are for private company perpetual futures, stablecoins, and asset tokenization. Their common constraint is not technological or market-driven, but rather external policy/regulatory forces that severely limit their growth speed and scale.

QWhat pivotal regulatory change occurs after the market turmoil in 2028, and what core problem does it aim to address?

AThe pivotal change is regulatory guidance allowing the open solicitation and promotion of private security secondary market transfers (restricted to qualified investors). It aims to address the lack of a legally enforceable underlying price anchor for synthetic perpetual futures contracts by creating a legal, public channel for trading the actual assets.

QBy 2029, how does the article suggest the initial question of 'what happens when crypto becomes traditional financial infrastructure' is ultimately answered?

AThe question loses its significance. The infrastructure becomes 'invisible,' fully abstracted into the background. The public no longer discusses it separately, similar to how people don't think about the clearinghouses behind their stockbrokers. The lasting visible outcome is the new asset trading market itself.

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