Cathie Wood says the market may have already seen the bottom for Bitcoin, and this time the old 4-year cycle might not control the market like before.
For years, Bitcoin moved in the same pattern: Big pump → hard crash → long recovery.
But now things are changing.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs brought massive institutional money into the market. Big companies, funds, and even governments are watching Bitcoin closely. That changes the game completely.
Cathie Wood believes Bitcoin is becoming a more mature asset, which means future corrections may become smaller while long-term growth stays strong.
The market is also reacting differently after the halving. Instead of extreme fear, buyers are stepping in faster and liquidity keeps growing.
Many traders expected another deep bear market. Instead, Bitcoin continues holding strong above major support levels while demand keeps rising.
If this trend continues, the old cycle theory could slowly lose its power.
Bitcoin is no longer moving like a small speculative asset. It is starting to behave like a global financial asset.
The next phase could surprise everyone who is still waiting for lower prices.
Bullish pressure is building for Bitcoin as the US Federal Reserve prepares to inject nearly $6.67B into the economy next week.
Fresh liquidity always changes the mood of the market. More money flowing into the system usually pushes investors toward risk assets — and crypto is the first place traders look when momentum returns.
Bitcoin is already holding strong above key levels while market confidence keeps rising. If this liquidity wave hits with full force, altcoins could follow hard and fast.
The market is starting to feel alive again. Bears are getting quieter. Smart money is watching closely.
$BTC looks ready for another explosive move if momentum continues building through the week ahead.
Eyes on the Fed. Eyes on Bitcoin. The next move could come faster than most expect.
The U.S. Federal Reserve is set to inject nearly $6.576 billion into the financial system next week — and markets are paying close attention.
Here’s what’s happening in simple words:
The Fed regularly adds or removes money from the system to keep financial markets stable and liquidity flowing smoothly. This upcoming injection means more cash will be available for banks and financial institutions, helping ease pressure in short-term funding markets.
Why does this matter?
When liquidity increases, investors often see it as a positive signal for risk assets like stocks and crypto. More money in the system can improve market confidence, support trading activity, and reduce financial stress behind the scenes.
Right now, traders are watching closely because every Fed move matters in this environment. Inflation, interest rates, bond yields, and recession fears are all connected — so even a multi-billion-dollar liquidity injection can influence market sentiment very quickly.
Some analysts believe this could help fuel short-term momentum across financial markets if liquidity conditions continue improving.
But at the same time, many are still cautious. One liquidity operation alone does not change the Fed’s larger fight against inflation or its long-term policy direction.
Still, $6.576 billion entering the system in a single week is not something the market ignores.