2025 was a year of milestone achievements for the cryptocurrency industry, alongside significant market divergence. The total market capitalization surpassed $4 trillion for the first time, with Bitcoin (BTC) reaching a new all-time high (ATH), reflecting continued institutional adoption, regulatory progress (especially around stablecoins), and the expansion of regulated investment products. Simultaneously, high macroeconomic uncertainty, driven by monetary policy, trade tensions, and geopolitical risks, dominated market behavior, leading to sharp price volatility and multiple risk-off episodes. This resulted in an extremely wide trading range of approximately 76% for the year, with the total market cap oscillating dramatically between roughly $2.4 trillion and $4.2 trillion. Despite structural advancements in market access and infrastructure, the crypto market ended the year down approximately 7.9%, highlighting that price formation in 2025 was increasingly influenced by macro conditions and traditional financial cycles, rather than being driven solely by crypto-native adoption.
From a macro perspective, the year was characterized by "data fog" and volatility, as markets navigated a new U.S. administration, the "Liberation Day" tariff shock, and blurred economic signals due to a government shutdown. While AI speculation and the OBBBA fiscal bill pushed BTC to new highs in the second half of the year, crypto markets decoupled from the traditional asset rally by the end of 2025 due to regulatory delays. However, the outlook for 2026 points to a clear "risk reset," driven by a "policy trifecta": globally synchronized monetary easing, massive fiscal stimulus (via cash/tax rebates), and a wave of deregulation. This shift is expected to replace retail-driven speculation with institutional inflows, bringing a liquidity-fueled expansion for cryptocurrencies, potentially supported by a U.S. strategic Bitcoin reserve.
Bitcoin showed a clear divergence between structural market-level strength and on-chain economic activity. BTC hit new highs during the year but ended slightly lower, underperforming gold and most major equity indices, while its market cap hovered around $1.8 trillion, maintaining a dominance of 58–60%. Despite softer price performance, concentration into BTC intensified: U.S. spot ETFs saw net inflows exceeding $21 billion for the year, and corporate holdings surpassed 1.1 million BTC, equivalent to approximately 5.5% of the total supply. Network security continued to strengthen, with the hash rate exceeding 1 ZH/s and mining difficulty rising about 36% year-over-year, indicating sustained strong miner investment. In contrast, on-chain activity slowed: active addresses decreased by approximately 16% year-over-year, transaction counts remained below previous cycle peaks, and speculative token activity saw only brief, unsustainable bursts. The signals collectively indicate that Bitcoin's liquidity, price formation, and demand are increasingly realized through off-chain financial channels and holding behavior, with the base layer playing a secondary role, further cementing Bitcoin's positioning as a macro financial asset rather than a transaction-dominated network.
At the Layer 1 (L1) level, 2025 demonstrated that raw activity volume is not a reliable indicator of economic relevance, as many networks failed to translate usage into fees, value capture, or sustained token performance. Meanwhile, the L1 landscape continued to consolidate around a few leading networks. Ethereum maintained dominance in developer activity, decentralized finance (DeFi) liquidity, and total value locked, but its base layer execution footprint and rollup-driven fee compression weighed on ETH's performance relative to BTC. Conversely, Solana sustained high transaction volumes and daily active users, significantly expanded its stablecoin supply, generated meaningful protocol revenue even as speculative activity normalized, and gained U.S. spot ETF approval, further strengthening institutional accessibility. BNB Chain leveraged mainstream market narratives and a strong retail trading base to drive on-chain spot and derivatives activity, large stablecoin settlement flows, and real-world asset (RWA) deployment, making BNB the best-performing major crypto asset. The key signal from 2025 was that L1 differentiation increasingly depends on the ability to monetize recurring flows (transactions, payments, or institutional settlements) rather than simply maximizing raw transaction volume.
Ethereum's Layer 2 (L2) ecosystem handled over 90% of Ethereum-related transaction execution in 2025, benefiting from protocol upgrades that increased blob capacity and reduced data availability (DA) costs. As execution migrated off-chain, the key focus was whether this scaling could translate into sustained usage, fee generation, and economic alignment with the base layer. From this perspective, results were significantly divergent: activity, liquidity, and fee generation concentrated in a few optimistic rollups (like Base and Arbitrum) and specific appchains with clear use cases and superior user experience, while many other chains saw usage plummet after incentives faded. Zero-knowledge (ZK) rollups continued to advance in prover efficiency and decentralization milestones but lagged optimistic rollups by an order of magnitude in total value locked (TVL) and fee generation. Fragmentation across over 100 rollups, diminishing incentive effects, and uneven sequencer decentralization remained major constraints.
In 2025, DeFi took another step in its transition toward "structural institutionalization," with a focus on capital efficiency and compliance. TVL stabilized at $124.4 billion, with capital composition shifting significantly toward stablecoins and yield-bearing assets rather than inflationary tokens. A historic milestone was RWA TVL ($17 billion) surpassing DEX TVL, driven by the adoption of tokenized treasuries and stocks. Concurrently, the U.S. GENIUS Act provided regulatory clarity for stablecoins, pushing their market cap above $307 billion and cementing their core role as global settlement infrastructure. Functionally, DeFi matured into a strong cash-flow-generating industry. Protocol revenue surged to $16.2 billion, rivaling major traditional financial giants, turning governance tokens into productive "blue-chip" assets. On-chain execution also gained dominance, with spot DEX-to-CEX trading ratios peaking near 20%.
2025 was a breakthrough year for stablecoins truly going mainstream. The total market cap surged nearly 50% to over $305 billion, fueled by milestone regulatory clarity from the GENIUS Act and institutional entry. Daily trading volume averaged a 26% increase to $3.54 trillion—far surpassing Visa's $1.34 trillion—demonstrating stablecoins' superiority in fast, borderless payments. Momentum came from a new cohort of heavyweights: six new stablecoins (BUIDL, PYUSD, RLUSD, USD1, USDf, and USDtB) each broke the $1 billion market cap threshold, bringing fresh competition and real-world utility. These developments collectively laid the groundwork for stablecoins' continued expansion in payments, savings, and fintech use cases.
Consumer crypto entered a decisive era: blockchain infrastructure has matured, and the focus has decisively shifted to real-world applications and seamless execution. Leading this transformation are neobanks and fintech platforms—whether Web2 giants or Web3-native projects—rapidly evolving into full banking-style services built on blockchain rails. While crypto gaming and social applications saw waning enthusiasm during the year, the deep integration of blockchain with global payments and fintech laid a critical foundation for a new generation of truly native networks designed from the ground up around transparency and verifiability. As the industry shifts from infrastructure building to application-driven growth, its core mission is also evolving: from decentralization for its own sake to the intentional design of trusted, verifiable systems that inspire confidence from both consumers and institutions.
In 2025, frontier technology focused on AI agents, on-chain payments, and decentralized coordination of real-world infrastructure. The most substantive progress was in agent payments becoming available at internet scale through the HTTP-native settlement standard (reviving the 402 "Payment Required" path), enabling pay-per-use models for APIs, data, and automated workflows; by year-end, this轨道 had processed over 100 million payments, with cumulative volume exceeding $30 million and daily transactions surpassing 1 million, with agents driving over 90% of the traffic. Meanwhile, Decentralized Physical AI (DePAI) gained attention as an extension of DePIN to coordinate autonomous machines, but progress in 2025 was more constrained by data quality, simulation-to-reality gaps, capital intensity, and safety and regulatory requirements than by token design. In contrast, DeFAI and DeSci remained in exploratory phases, with limited evidence of durable economic output compared to agent-native payments and early machine economy use cases.
Institutional adoption was characterized by the embedding of crypto into core financial workflows, not just access via price exposure. Banks moved closer to mainstream crypto-backed lending, indicating greater acceptance of BTC (and selectively ETH) as financial-grade collateral within custody and compliance frameworks, while regulated crypto ETFs continued to expand in breadth and structure, reinforcing ETFs as the preferred institutional access channel. Tokenized money market funds emerged as a credible RWA tokenization use case, gaining traction as on-chain cash equivalents due to faster settlement, better collateral liquidity, and auditability. Meanwhile, corporate digital asset treasuries (DATs) scaled dramatically, but 2025 highlighted sustainability pressures: leveraged treasury tools underperformed simple yield-bearing ETF alternatives—emphasizing a shift toward infrastructure and yield-driven adoption rather than mere asset accumulation.
Global crypto regulation matured along divergent but complementary paths: the U.S. advanced innovation through the GENIUS Act (July), establishing the first federal stablecoin framework; Europe implemented the strictly licensed MiCA; Hong Kong solidified its hub status with stablecoin regulations and tax incentives; Singapore reinforced high standards through stricter compliance and licensing rules (June). Internationally, commitment to the OECD Crypto Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) accelerated, laying the groundwork for standardized tax transparency and cross-border information exchange.
Heading into 2026, we are particularly excited about several key themes and expect significant progress in these areas throughout the year. These themes span multiple narratives and sectors, including the macro environment and Bitcoin, institutional adoption, policy and regulation, stablecoins, tokenization, decentralized trading, prediction markets, and more.







