Print PDF

Bitcoin’s falling volatility

Bitcoin’s volatility has declined to multi-year lows, prompting discussion around whether this represents a structural maturation of the market or the calm before renewed turbulence. Structural factors, including institutional participation, ETFs, and regulatory clarity, suggest a more stable long-term environment. However, cyclical market patterns indicate that low volatility phases have historically preceded significant price breakouts, with upside moves more likely in the current macro and market context.


Performance of Bitcoin 180 days after volatility falls

Source: CoinMarketCap, Sygnum Bank

Bitcoin’s realised volatility has remained subdued for over a year, currently running at only half of its long-term average. Similar levels were last seen in Q3 2023, just before a 60 percent rally over the following quarter and the price nearly tripling over 6 months.


Market maturation

Bitcoin’s volatility has been trending down over time as the market matures and liquidity increases. Institutional participation and the availability of instruments for hedging are supporting the trend for Bitcoin gradually shedding its high-risk characteristics.  

Institutional investors (often via spot ETFs), corporations, crypto prime brokers, and hedge funds now account for a significant share of Bitcoin’s daily flows. As institutional investors typically pursue long term exposure and portfolio diversification rather than speculative trading, this dampens volatility.

Meanwhile, increased regulatory clarity and the availability of ETF structures have attracted tens of billions of institutional inflows in 2025 and improved market depth, making shocks less disruptive.


Quiet before the storm

In addition to the long term trend, market equilibrium has led to a period of exceptionally low volatility. Significant purchases by institutions and treasury companies have been met by supply from some very large, very long term holders. This balance has made breakouts to the upside relatively slow, while the sizable demand supported the downside.

Meanwhile, liquidity dynamics have remained healthy despite a growing share of bitcoin supply being illiquid, held by treasury companies. Although a fall in the liquid supply could lead to reduced liquidity which could in turn increase the size and speed of price moves, we have seen a continued rise in traded volumes.

Nonetheless, periods of market equilibria do not last, and a breakout on a catalyst is likely.


Breakout potential

As the market continues to grow in size and mature, lasting structural change, supported by stronger infrastructure, regulatory clarity, and institutional flows ensures that volatility remains on a downward trajectory.

At the same time, history shows that the current suppressed volatility is unlikely to last, and cyclical indicators also point toward a breakout.


Likely catalysts and direction

Periods of compressed volatility have consistently preceded major bitcoin price movements, and current conditions mirror prior low volatility phases that ended in strong rallies.

Institutional accumulation, continued (although decelerating) demand from treasury companies, and the macroeconomic backdrop of plentiful liquidity suggest that a breakout to the upside is more likely.

Nonetheless, geopolitical events or large liquidations by whales coupled with slowing demand pose downside risks.


Outlook

Bitcoin’s volatility will likely remain lower on average than in earlier years due to the structural evolution of the market, driven by institutionalisation and regulation.

Meanwhile, cyclical dynamics imply that a breakout is probable in the coming months, with historical precedent and market drivers suggesting a higher likelihood of upward price movement.


Summary

Bitcoin’s falling volatility reflects both structural changes in market composition and cyclical positioning. While long-term volatility is likely to remain more contained than in Bitcoin’s early years, history suggests the current lull will not last much longer, and with institutional demand, regulatory support, and strong global liquidity, the next major move is more likely to the upside.

Read next article

Local restrictions – Provision of cross-border services

It looks like you are using a computer with an IP address located outside of Switzerland.
If you are located in Switzerland, please click “Continue” to access the Sygnum Bank AG (Sygnum) website.

If you are not located in Switzerland, please read below.

This website and the information contained herein are addressed solely to persons residing or domiciled in Switzerland.

Sygnum is a regulated bank supervised by the Swiss Market Financial Authority (FINMA). The products and services on this website are authorised in Switzerland. Sygnum cannot promote its products and services in other countries where it is not authorised by the supervisory authority of that country to do so.

If you click on “Continue” to visit this website, you confirm that you have read and understood the above and you are visiting this website on your own initiative without any active promotion or solicitation from Sygnum.

Investor qualification

The following content is available to qualified investors. Please confirm your details below to visit this page, or please see our other digital asset updates here.

Security alert

Stay alert to fraudulent communications. Sygnum will never post messages on social media or private messaging applications regarding Sygnum banking access or logins. If you have concerns, contact us.

Close