Crypto confidence: Why traders are looking beyond bitcoin volatility
Bitcoin may no longer be the reigning king of crypto. Here’s how traders navigated one of 2025’s most active markets.

Source: UGC
2025 has been a defining year for global markets, and cryptocurrency trading was no exception. Global trade tensions intensified as the US imposed steep tariffs on several countries, triggering immediate retaliation and market uncertainty. Yet, despite the geopolitical friction, major asset classes surged: the Dow Jones climbed 8.7% YTD, and gold delivered more than 50% over the same period.
Under normal circumstances, this combination of political uncertainty, trade disruption, and aggressive market repricing would send crypto markets into defensive mode. Instead, crypto traders showed remarkable composure. Even as bitcoin whipsawed between 75,000 USD and 126,000 USD throughout the year, participation remained strong, and more importantly, trader behavior began to shift in ways that suggest the market is maturing beyond its usual volatility cycles.
A story of volatility
Painting the cryptocurrency landscape in 2025 with broad strokes may be challenging, but it is necessary to understand the dynamics that affect the market. Around the time of the new US presidential inauguration in January, bitcoin briefly surged to 109,400 USD amid renewed political support for digital assets. However, the momentum was short-lived. Prices rolled back within days, only to recover and break through the long-watched 100,000 USD level again soon after. By April, BTC had fallen to 75,000 USD, before climbing steadily toward its October peak above 126,000 USD.
Altcoins also experienced a whirlwind. In January, ripple (XRP) reached its highest ever close month-over-month, but wiped out 20% of those gains in just 24 hours. During the same period, most major altcoins, including ETH, AVAX, ADA, DOT, and SHIB, experienced a 17-34% decline in value. Market sentiment deteriorated further after bitcoin posted its largest monthly drop since 2022, while a high-profile exchange hack added another layer of pressure.
Part of the pullback was due to market structure: extreme highs tend to be followed by profit-taking. But the year’s geopolitical backdrop and delayed monetary easing by the Fed also weighed heavily on crypto risk appetite.
The stability of stablecoins
Despite the broader market downturn, stablecoins quietly reached new milestones. While the combined market cap of major cryptocurrencies slipped by 18.6%, stablecoins climbed to an all-time high of 226.1 billion USD. The biggest winner during this period was USDC, which added 16.1 billion USD during this period. This is a clear signal that boldest crypto traders seek stability when uncertainty rises.
And for a brief moment, ripple managed to outperform the king of the cryptos, bitcoin. Meanwhile, ethereum and solana (SOL) saw deeper corrections of 45.3% and 34.1% respectively.
“The trends are showing that the market is starting to establish itself in more concrete terms. We are seeing cryptocurrency investors employ more effective risk management and move away from their strict adherence to the ‘Big Four.’ These are very encouraging signs of an evolving market, more thoughtful, more structured, and more resilient,” said Quoc Dat Tong, Exness senior financial markets strategist.
The power of the pivot
For years, cryptocurrency CFD traders largely centered their strategies on bitcoin, ethereum, solana, and ripple. But the 2025 market has shown a clear pivot. More traders diversified into stablecoin CFDs and smaller crypto, not out of speculation alone but to build portfolios that could withstand the year’s volatility.
This shift also brought a sharper focus on broker infrastructure. Trading highly active, fast-moving assets demands more than market knowledge; it demands conditions built for precision.
Platform stability, fast execution, and low spreads are a rare but necessary trifecta. Exness has invested heavily in this infrastructure. Its proprietary pricing model and execution engine help maintain stable spreads1 and precise order fills,2 even when markets accelerate. The better-than-market conditions offered by Exness have become a defining advantage for traders navigating the unpredictable momentum of the crypto market.
Galloping into the new year
As the year draws to a close, bitcoin is positioned just below its all-time highs. Analysts remain cautiously optimistic for the next year, but acknowledge several potential headwinds: slower global growth, the lagged effect of tariffs, and the late-cycle dynamics of the post-halving rally.
Historically, bitcoin halvings support upward momentum for 18 to 24 months. Considering the last halving in April 2024, the market may approach the late stages of that cycle in 2026. Exchange-traded fund inflows could offset some of this cooling, but expectations remain measured.
Beyond bitcoin, new developments could shape the broader market. The EU is progressing toward a digital euro, which is expected to be introduced after its legal framework is adopted in 2026, with implementation anticipated by 2029. Other economies are exploring similar digital-currency frameworks, developments that may influence stablecoin dynamics.
How confident should crypto traders be in 2026?
“2025 brought sharp swings, from tariffs to sudden highs and deep lows, but the cryptocurrency market handled it with surprising composure. These stresses didn’t swing the market; they strengthened its fabric,” Tong commented.
For traders, the lesson is clear: adaptability matters more than the size of a single swing. The era when bitcoin dominated by default is fading. In its place is a broader ecosystem defined by diversification, more sophisticated risk management, and smoother execution powered by brokers with robust technology.
Crypto’s next chapter will reward traders who combine agility with infrastructure, and who recognize that confidence isn’t built on the absence of volatility but on the ability to navigate through it.
1 Spreads may fluctuate and widen due to factors including market volatility and liquidity, news releases, economic events, when markets open or close, and the type of instruments being traded.
2 Delays and slippage may occur. No guarantee of execution speed or precision is provided.
Source: Briefly News