A Crypto Optimist’s Guide for 2025

Before I undertake the hard task of predicting where the crypto industry will go in 2025, let’s take a minute to recall where it has been. The bout of exuberance we are currently experiencing was preceded by three episodes of crypto summers followed by crypto winters — roughly three years of generally rising Bitcoin prices, and increasing capital flows and popular interest, followed by 14 months or so of sliding Bitcoin prices and serious questions about the future of crypto.

summer follows

It’s tempting to assume this is the eternal pattern — in which case Bitcoin’s price might increase to around $500,000 in 2025, followed by a crash around the end of the year to a low around $100,000 in 2026 — but that misses the main point. The industry has made substantial progress. In 2014, many people thought Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies would not survive, and that the underlying blockchains would never be more than a minor technology for niche applications. In 2018, most assumed crypto would not disappear, but that it would never deliver a social revolution comparable to the internet. In 2022, the question was whether the sector could integrate with existing regulation and financial markets or survive as an outlaw alternative similar to the dark web.

2025 will go a long way toward answering that last question. There are reasons to think the Cold War between crypto innovators and governments will end, allowing capital to move more freely between traditional and crypto sectors. Bitcoin and the “respectable” crytpo projects, backed by major venture capital firms and traditional financial institutions, could emerge into full sunlight, with projects developed by “two gals in a garage” and shadowy groups of hackers, anarchists and libertarians still in the shadows but perhaps out of the crosshairs of law enforcement. This would lead to further Bitcoin appreciation. Or crypto could remain in legal limbo with the associated volatility, with only Bitcoin and projects controlled by traditional companies having clear rules. This would not crash Bitcoin prices, but it might limit the upside.