This article is based on Messari’s December release of the “Cryptocurrency Outlook 2026,” a report exceeding 100,000 words that takes over 6 hours to read. We distill the true reasons behind the market psychology collapse from it.
Preface | The seemingly contradictory state of the market
The cryptocurrency market in 2025 presents a bizarre split: macro indicators continue to improve, yet micro sentiment plunges into despair.
In November, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index hit a historic low of 10, entering the “Extreme Fear” zone. Such a level of emotional low has been rare in history:
March 2020: Panic caused by global liquidity crisis
May 2021: Leverage liquidation wave
Mid-2022: Systemic collapse of Luna and 3AC
2018-2019: Industry bear market
A common point in these periods: the industry itself is failing. But 2025 is different — no exchange misappropriation of user funds, no collapse of multi-billion dollar Ponzi projects, no breakdown of stablecoin systems, and the total market cap has not fallen below the previous cycle’s high. Instead, institutionalization and regulation are advancing.
From a “factual” perspective, this is not the end of the industry. But from a “feeling” perspective, many participants are experiencing their darkest moments in their careers.
Part One | Structural split: Two worlds within the same market
Messari opens the report with a stark contrast:
If you work in asset allocation on Wall Street, 2025 might be the best year since you entered the industry.
But if you stay up late on Telegram and Discord, watching candlesticks for Alpha opportunities, you are nostalgic for the “good old days.”
The same market, two completely opposite experiences. This is not random emotional fluctuation nor a simple market turn; it is a deep restructuring of the fundamental basis of market participants.
Why is sentiment so bleak?
The root cause is not on the charts but in three core shifts:
First, the disappearance of Alpha opportunities
In previous cycles, the implicit promise of the crypto market was: if you work hard enough, stay sharp enough, and bet boldly enough, you can earn excess returns. 2025 first systematically shattered this assumption.
Most tokens no longer enjoy a “storytelling” premium
Growth in L1 ecosystems no longer automatically translates into token appreciation
High volatility no longer means high returns
The link between hard work and stellar results has broken
Second, mismatch in participation modes
Market incentives have changed, but most still participate with old mindsets:
Market tilts toward “long-term holders,” “asset allocators,” “institutional participants”
Many still operate as “short-term Alpha hunters”
When the new system no longer rewards old ways, frustration becomes inevitable
Third, the truth of the system surfaces
This is not a psychological crisis caused by “not making money,” but a cognitive reconstruction of the entire financial system.
Part Two | Hidden true reasons: Long-term deterioration of the global monetary system
To understand why the psychological index hit extreme lows in 2025, we must step outside the crypto market itself and look at the broader macro context.
The real root of psychological collapse is the global debt crisis
Over the past 50 years, the debt-to-GDP ratios of major economies have shown a worrying upward trend:
Country
Debt/GDP Ratio
USA
120.8%
Japan
236.7%
France
113.1%
UK
101.3%
China
88.3%
This is not a matter of poor management by any single country but a universal phenomenon crossing political systems, development stages, and cultural differences. Democracies, autocracies, developed economies, emerging markets — all are caught in the same dilemma.
What does faster debt growth than economic growth imply?
When debt growth exceeds GDP growth, governments have only three options:
Financial repression: capital controls, withdrawal restrictions, regulatory interventions
Whichever path is chosen, the final cost is borne by savers.
Messari cautiously but strongly states in the report:
“When debt grows faster than economic output, the costs fall most heavily on savers.”
In Chinese: When debt outpaces economic output, savers inevitably become the sacrifices.
Why did the psychology suddenly collapse in 2025?
Because more and more people realized this reality for the first time in 2025.
The previous self-deception gradually disintegrated:
“Inflation is temporary” → inflation has become the norm
“Cash is safest” → cash keeps depreciating
“Fiat is stable long-term” → stability is eroding
Participants realize:
Hard work ≠ wealth protection
Saving alone ≠ wealth growth
Asset allocation ≠ guaranteed returns
Trust in the entire financial system begins to fracture, and the crypto market is just the first to show this breakdown.
The true mission of cryptocurrency
A common misconception needs clarification: cryptocurrencies are not promised to deliver higher yields.
Their value lies in:
Predictability of rules: monetary policy cannot be arbitrarily changed by a single entity
Right to self-custody: assets can be stored without relying on third parties
Freedom of cross-border transfer: value can be moved without permission
Predefined scarcity: total supply is set in advance and unchangeable
In other words: In a world of high debt and low certainty, giving individuals the choice of monetary features — that is the key.
Part Three | Why only BTC is redefined by the market as “money”
When systemic monetary issues surface, the next question naturally arises: why BTC and not others?
The essence of money: consensus, not technology
This is the first key to understanding BTC and a misconception many engineers tend to overlook.
Messari repeatedly emphasizes: Money is social consensus, not a matter of technological optimization.
Money is not faster than anyone
Not cheaper than anyone
Not more functional than anyone
Money is about: who can be long-term, stably regarded as a store of value.
From this perspective, BTC’s position is less mysterious.
Data speaks: BTC’s monopoly performance
From December 2022 to November 2025:
BTC increase: 429%
Market cap: from 318 billion USD to 1.81 trillion USD
Global asset ranking: among the top ten
More importantly, relative performance:
BTC.D (Bitcoin’s market cap share) from 36.6% → 57.3%
In a cycle where “altcoins should be rotating upward,” capital keeps flowing into BTC. This is not luck from a single rally but a market reclassification of assets.
The essence of institutionalization: institutionalizing consensus
ETFs and DAs (Digital Asset Funds) seem like just “new demand sides,” but their deeper meaning is:
ETFs make BTC compliant with regulations, becoming a regulated asset
DAs bring BTC into corporate and government balance sheets, making it a strategic asset
National reserve plans give BTC national credit endorsement
When these institutions hold BTC, it is no longer a “high-risk asset that can be discarded at any time,” but a monetary asset that must be held long-term and is difficult to sell quickly.
In this state, assets are hard to devalue again.
The “boredom” of BTC precisely proves its monetary nature
This is the most counterintuitive phenomenon of 2025:
BTC has no applications
No narrative cycles
No ecological stories
Not even “novelty”
But precisely because of this, BTC fully conforms to the characteristics of money:
No reliance on future promises
No need for growth narratives
No need for teams to continuously supply
Just avoid making mistakes
In a world of high debt and low certainty, “not making mistakes” itself becomes a scarce asset.
BTC’s strength is proof of market rationalization
Many misunderstandings: BTC’s strength = market failure
The correct understanding should be: BTC’s strength = market becoming more rational
When the market begins to reward:
Stability
Predictability
Long-term credibility
All strategies based on “high volatility = high returns” will naturally come under pressure. This is not a problem with BTC but a sign that participation methods are outdated.
Part Four | The dilemma of Layer 1 ecosystems: from “future money” to “high-risk assets”
After establishing BTC’s position, an unavoidable question arises: if money already has an answer, where is the future of the Layer 1 ecosystem?
Harsh data: 81% of market cap absorbed into “money” categories
By the end of 2025, the total crypto market cap of about 32.6 trillion USD is distributed as:
BTC: 1.80 trillion USD (55%)
Other L1s: 0.83 trillion USD (26%)
Remaining assets: 0.63 trillion USD (19%)
Total: 81% of market cap classified as “money” or “potential money.”
What does this mean?
The valuation logic of the L1 ecosystem has completely shifted — no longer based on “platform applications” or “ecosystem scale,” but on “potential to become money.”
The paradox of L1: thriving ecosystems but failing the “money test”
This is the most painful data comparison:
Messari’s analysis shows that, excluding special cases like TRON and Hyperliquid:
Total revenue of L1s is declining, but valuation multiples are rising
Year
P/S multiple
Total revenue
2021
40x
12.3 billion USD
2022
212x
4.9 billion USD
2023
137x
2.7 billion USD
2024
205x
3.6 billion USD
2025
536x
1.7 billion USD
Revenue declines while valuation multiples explode. This mismatch cannot be reasonably explained by “future growth.”
The truth: L1 is not dead but reclassified
Messari’s conclusion is straightforward: The market has not killed L1; it has retracted their “money-imagining space.”
Once L1:
Cannot serve as a stable store of value
Not suitable for long-term holding
Cannot generate predictable cash flows
It only remains as a high-risk, highly volatile trading asset.
The case of Solana: the paradox of growth
SOL is one of the few L1s that outperformed BTC in 2025. But data reveals the truth:
SOL ecosystem growth: 20-30x
SOL price increase: only 87% surpassing BTC’s gains
In other words: even with explosive ecosystem growth, it can only barely keep up with BTC’s performance.
What does this indicate?
The once-incentive function has been rewritten: only ecosystem explosions by orders of magnitude can achieve “a slightly better” relative performance.
The real problem facing L1: identity crisis
When BTC becomes “money,” L1s are forced to answer a tougher question:
If not money, then what are you?
Application platform? But revenue is declining
Store of value? But volatility is too high
Speculative asset? But that space is crowded
Losing the “money candidate” shelter, all valuation of L1s must revert to fundamentals — and fundamentals are shrinking.
Conclusion | The cyclical nature of psychological collapse and systemic transformation
The psychological crisis in the 2025 crypto market is not due to industry failure but a shift in the entire participation framework:
From:
An era where everyone had Alpha opportunities
All new projects had the imagination of “becoming the next BTC”
Simple logic of high volatility = high returns
Upward cycles driven by narrative rotations
To:
An era dominated by institutions, with clear rules and asset allocation
Only assets capable of embodying “money characteristics” can command premiums
Stability and credibility become core asset valuation factors
Ecosystem growth and token appreciation are decoupled
This transition has driven the historical low of the psychological index — not because the system has failed, but because participant identities need upgrading, yet most are still participating with old identities in a new game.
Understanding this is key to navigating through 2025.
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Deep Analysis of the 2025 Cryptocurrency Market Psychological Crisis: From Sentiment Index to the Transformation of Currency Essence
Preface | The seemingly contradictory state of the market
The cryptocurrency market in 2025 presents a bizarre split: macro indicators continue to improve, yet micro sentiment plunges into despair.
In November, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index hit a historic low of 10, entering the “Extreme Fear” zone. Such a level of emotional low has been rare in history:
A common point in these periods: the industry itself is failing. But 2025 is different — no exchange misappropriation of user funds, no collapse of multi-billion dollar Ponzi projects, no breakdown of stablecoin systems, and the total market cap has not fallen below the previous cycle’s high. Instead, institutionalization and regulation are advancing.
From a “factual” perspective, this is not the end of the industry. But from a “feeling” perspective, many participants are experiencing their darkest moments in their careers.
Part One | Structural split: Two worlds within the same market
Messari opens the report with a stark contrast:
If you work in asset allocation on Wall Street, 2025 might be the best year since you entered the industry.
But if you stay up late on Telegram and Discord, watching candlesticks for Alpha opportunities, you are nostalgic for the “good old days.”
The same market, two completely opposite experiences. This is not random emotional fluctuation nor a simple market turn; it is a deep restructuring of the fundamental basis of market participants.
Why is sentiment so bleak?
The root cause is not on the charts but in three core shifts:
First, the disappearance of Alpha opportunities
In previous cycles, the implicit promise of the crypto market was: if you work hard enough, stay sharp enough, and bet boldly enough, you can earn excess returns. 2025 first systematically shattered this assumption.
Second, mismatch in participation modes
Market incentives have changed, but most still participate with old mindsets:
Third, the truth of the system surfaces
This is not a psychological crisis caused by “not making money,” but a cognitive reconstruction of the entire financial system.
Part Two | Hidden true reasons: Long-term deterioration of the global monetary system
To understand why the psychological index hit extreme lows in 2025, we must step outside the crypto market itself and look at the broader macro context.
The real root of psychological collapse is the global debt crisis
Over the past 50 years, the debt-to-GDP ratios of major economies have shown a worrying upward trend:
This is not a matter of poor management by any single country but a universal phenomenon crossing political systems, development stages, and cultural differences. Democracies, autocracies, developed economies, emerging markets — all are caught in the same dilemma.
What does faster debt growth than economic growth imply?
When debt growth exceeds GDP growth, governments have only three options:
Whichever path is chosen, the final cost is borne by savers.
Messari cautiously but strongly states in the report:
In Chinese: When debt outpaces economic output, savers inevitably become the sacrifices.
Why did the psychology suddenly collapse in 2025?
Because more and more people realized this reality for the first time in 2025.
The previous self-deception gradually disintegrated:
Participants realize:
Trust in the entire financial system begins to fracture, and the crypto market is just the first to show this breakdown.
The true mission of cryptocurrency
A common misconception needs clarification: cryptocurrencies are not promised to deliver higher yields.
Their value lies in:
In other words: In a world of high debt and low certainty, giving individuals the choice of monetary features — that is the key.
Part Three | Why only BTC is redefined by the market as “money”
When systemic monetary issues surface, the next question naturally arises: why BTC and not others?
The essence of money: consensus, not technology
This is the first key to understanding BTC and a misconception many engineers tend to overlook.
Messari repeatedly emphasizes: Money is social consensus, not a matter of technological optimization.
Money is about: who can be long-term, stably regarded as a store of value.
From this perspective, BTC’s position is less mysterious.
Data speaks: BTC’s monopoly performance
From December 2022 to November 2025:
More importantly, relative performance:
BTC.D (Bitcoin’s market cap share) from 36.6% → 57.3%
In a cycle where “altcoins should be rotating upward,” capital keeps flowing into BTC. This is not luck from a single rally but a market reclassification of assets.
The essence of institutionalization: institutionalizing consensus
ETFs and DAs (Digital Asset Funds) seem like just “new demand sides,” but their deeper meaning is:
When these institutions hold BTC, it is no longer a “high-risk asset that can be discarded at any time,” but a monetary asset that must be held long-term and is difficult to sell quickly.
In this state, assets are hard to devalue again.
The “boredom” of BTC precisely proves its monetary nature
This is the most counterintuitive phenomenon of 2025:
But precisely because of this, BTC fully conforms to the characteristics of money:
In a world of high debt and low certainty, “not making mistakes” itself becomes a scarce asset.
BTC’s strength is proof of market rationalization
Many misunderstandings: BTC’s strength = market failure
The correct understanding should be: BTC’s strength = market becoming more rational
When the market begins to reward:
All strategies based on “high volatility = high returns” will naturally come under pressure. This is not a problem with BTC but a sign that participation methods are outdated.
Part Four | The dilemma of Layer 1 ecosystems: from “future money” to “high-risk assets”
After establishing BTC’s position, an unavoidable question arises: if money already has an answer, where is the future of the Layer 1 ecosystem?
Harsh data: 81% of market cap absorbed into “money” categories
By the end of 2025, the total crypto market cap of about 32.6 trillion USD is distributed as:
Total: 81% of market cap classified as “money” or “potential money.”
What does this mean?
The valuation logic of the L1 ecosystem has completely shifted — no longer based on “platform applications” or “ecosystem scale,” but on “potential to become money.”
The paradox of L1: thriving ecosystems but failing the “money test”
This is the most painful data comparison:
Messari’s analysis shows that, excluding special cases like TRON and Hyperliquid:
Total revenue of L1s is declining, but valuation multiples are rising
Revenue declines while valuation multiples explode. This mismatch cannot be reasonably explained by “future growth.”
The truth: L1 is not dead but reclassified
Messari’s conclusion is straightforward: The market has not killed L1; it has retracted their “money-imagining space.”
Once L1:
It only remains as a high-risk, highly volatile trading asset.
The case of Solana: the paradox of growth
SOL is one of the few L1s that outperformed BTC in 2025. But data reveals the truth:
In other words: even with explosive ecosystem growth, it can only barely keep up with BTC’s performance.
What does this indicate?
The once-incentive function has been rewritten: only ecosystem explosions by orders of magnitude can achieve “a slightly better” relative performance.
The real problem facing L1: identity crisis
When BTC becomes “money,” L1s are forced to answer a tougher question:
If not money, then what are you?
Losing the “money candidate” shelter, all valuation of L1s must revert to fundamentals — and fundamentals are shrinking.
Conclusion | The cyclical nature of psychological collapse and systemic transformation
The psychological crisis in the 2025 crypto market is not due to industry failure but a shift in the entire participation framework:
From:
To:
This transition has driven the historical low of the psychological index — not because the system has failed, but because participant identities need upgrading, yet most are still participating with old identities in a new game.
Understanding this is key to navigating through 2025.