Cryptocurrencies are getting volatile again. Bitcoin (BTC 3.21%), for example, rose to an all-time high of $126,200 in early October, followed by a steep sell-off. On the morning of Nov. 19, Bitcoin is (checks notes) down 12% in the last week and trading at $90,440 per coin. You could call it a Bitcoin bear market already, right after an all-time high.
And that's Bitcoin, the aging graybeard of the crypto sector that started it all and remains the largest crypto by market value. Younger and less stable names such as Avalanche (AVAX 2.95%), Cardano (ADA 7.22%), and Polygon (POL 5.68%) are down 40% or more since the price drops started in October.
It's almost like the heydays of crypto volatility, if you remember the wild price swings of 2016 or 2020. Even leading names like Bitcoin often rose or fell at least 10% in a single day, and you never knew whether they'd keep going or reverse course the next day. 50% gains or price drops could be just around the corner -- blink and you'd miss it.
It's almost impossible to predict what any particular coin will be worth next week or next year. But I can explain why the next 5 years will be nothing like the last 5.

CRYPTO: BTC
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Volatility is back. Did you miss it?
Crypto was supposed to be a hedge against government-induced financial chaos. Instead, the leading coins have largely moved along with the broader economy and the stock market -- just much faster. When the S&P 500 (^GSPC +1.04%) says "jump," Bitcoin doesn't ask "how high." It just gets on a trampoline.
As a result, the Beta values of crypto-based exchange-traded funds (ETFs) like the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT 3.17%) are not dipping below 1.00, as a true market hedge's volatility score would. Low but positive Beta scores indicate slower price swings than the market index you're comparing your asset to -- usually the S&P 500. Negative ones belong to stocks, bonds, funds, and cryptocurrencies that move in the opposite direction.
Instead, IBIT's beta hovers at 2.9 today, in between the leveraged tech stock funds ProShares Ultra QQQ 2x (QLD +2.84%) around 2.5 and ProShares UltraPro QQQ 3x (TQQQ +4.22%) at 3.5. In other words, IBIT and Bitcoin tend to move along with the stock market, but roughly 3x faster.
Image source: Getty Images.
There's a new rule book for crypto buyers
If you're still trading crypto strictly based on halving cycles and stock-to-flow scarcity models, you're playing by an outdated rule book.
This is Bitcoin's fourth halving cycle, and it's breaking all the patterns the first three seemed to establish. The predictable post-halving price surge? I mean, Bitcoin nearly doubled from the April 2024 halving to Oct. 4, 2025, but that's small potatoes compared to the nearly 670% gain Bitcoin saw 18 months after the third halving in 2020. Bitcoin miners used to go out of business by the boatload after each reward cut, but it's not happening in the fourth cycle.
That's because Bitcoin miners found a new side hustle: artificial intelligence (AI). When crypto prices tank, miners used to face a stark choice -- shut down their expensive operations or go bankrupt. Now they're renting out their data centers and selling electric power to AI companies training the next ChatGPT. Some operations barely mine Bitcoin anymore, treating it more like a beer-money side gig while their real revenue comes from AI computing services -- at least while Bitcoin prices are low.
This agile business development changes everything. The selling pressure from miners needing to cover costs? Reduced. The upcoming 2028 halving will hit a fundamentally different mining ecosystem -- one where Bitcoin might be the backup plan for miners like MARA Holdings (MARA 1.61%) and Riot Platforms (RIOT 0.82%), not the main event.
The four-year cycle of predictable chart squiggles that crypto veterans could set their watches to? Consider it officially broken. Bitcoin is growing up, and the rest of the crypto community is invited to the birthday party.

NASDAQ: MARA
Key Data Points
So, where will crypto be in 5 years?
Here's what I can tell you about 2030: Bitcoin won't be where the old models predict, but it'll probably be higher than today. The Strategic Bitcoin Reserve alone signals that crypto is earning institutional acceptance nowadays, and that's a game-changing macro trend.
Expect more trampoline action along the way, though. The Fed will keep everyone guessing, miners will keep pivoting between crypto and AI depending on what pays better, and at least one black swan nobody sees coming will send prices careening in directions that make the recent 40% drops look quaint by comparison. Someone should give those birds some cracked corn and a map of the Caribbean -- I'd love to take a break from unpredictable macro crises.
The smart money isn't trying to time the perfect entry anymore. They're accepting that crypto's adolescent volatility is the price of admission to what could be the foundation of tomorrow's financial system. Whether that's Bitcoin at $500,000, Ethereum (ETH 2.94%) running half the world's smart contracts, or Polkadot (DOT 7.80%) finally getting its moment in the Web3 sun, the next five years will reward patience over prediction.
I'm invested in crypto names such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Polkadot, because I expect them to gain value in the long run. But the positions are small enough that I'd be OK if something goes wrong and my favorite cryptos go to zero instead.
Crypto in 2030 will be simultaneously more boring (with actual utility!) and more explosive (those volatility spurts aren't going away) than anything you've seen so far. The only prediction I'm truly confident about is that anyone claiming to know exactly where prices will be is selling you something.
Buckle up and watch out for black swans with sunglasses. It's going to be a weird ride.