Timothy Morano
Apr 19, 2026 19:48
Galaxy’s Alex Thorn flags Bitcoin’s weakest halving cycle ever with only 97% gains versus 761%+ in prior cycles. Volatility at 1.75% signals structural shift.
Bitcoin‘s current market cycle is performing dramatically worse than any previous halving cycle, with gains of just 97% from the April 2024 halving price compared to triple and quadruple-digit returns in earlier eras. The data raises uncomfortable questions about whether BTC’s legendary boom cycles are becoming a relic of the past.
Alex Thorn, head of firmwide research at Galaxy, published the sobering comparison on April 19, showing the current cycle’s peak at $125,000 in October 2025 represents a fraction of historical performance. For context: the 2020 cycle delivered 761% gains, 2016 saw 2,950%, and the 2012 cycle produced a staggering 9,294% return.
“Cycle four is dramatically underperforming prior cycles,” Thorn wrote on X. “Is this the new normal, or is it the new normal until it isn’t?”
Volatility Has Collapsed
The numbers tell a stark story. Bitcoin’s 30-day volatility index hasn’t exceeded 3.11% this entire cycle—a level last touched in August 2024. Compare that to April 2020, when the same gauge spiked to 9.64%. Current readings sit at just 1.75%, according to Bitbo data.
For traders who built strategies around Bitcoin’s wild swings, this compression matters. Lower volatility typically means tighter ranges, fewer breakout opportunities, and a market that increasingly moves with macro factors rather than crypto-native catalysts.
BTC traded at approximately $74,984 as of April 19, up nearly 5% over the past week but still roughly 40% below its October 2025 peak.
The ETF Effect Complicates Comparisons
Critics of Thorn’s analysis point to a key anomaly: Bitcoin hit an all-time high above $70,000 in March 2024—before the halving even occurred. That had never happened in previous cycles.
The culprit? Spot Bitcoin ETF approvals in January 2024 pulled forward demand that would typically materialize post-halving. This front-running effect may have compressed the cycle’s upside before it officially began, making direct comparisons to earlier halvings somewhat misleading.
Fidelity Digital Assets offers another perspective worth considering. While upside has diminished, so have drawdowns. Previous bear markets saw Bitcoin crash 80-90% from peaks. The current decline from $125,000 to around $60,000 represents roughly 50%—painful, but structurally different from historical wipeouts.
What Comes Next
VanEck CEO Jan van Eck suggested in March that Bitcoin is nearing a bottom, with gradual price recovery expected through 2026. Whether that plays out depends partly on whether the muted cycle dynamics represent maturation or temporary suppression.
The institutional infrastructure now surrounding Bitcoin—ETFs, corporate treasuries, regulated custody—has fundamentally altered how capital flows into the asset. Michael Saylor’s Strategy continues accumulating, with recent signals pointing to another major purchase. Meanwhile, mining operations expand as Alcoa reportedly moves to sell a dormant smelter to NYDIG.
For traders, the takeaway is practical: strategies calibrated to 2020-era volatility need recalibration. Bitcoin isn’t dead, but it may be growing up—and that comes with different risk-reward profiles than the wild west days.
Image source: Shutterstock

