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The 2015 cycle took about $69 billion for a gain near 10,000%. The 2018 cycle needed about $365 billion for roughly 2,000%. This cycle, running since 2022, has taken in about $697 billion and returned 689%. The figures track realized capitalization, a measure that values each coin at the price it last moved rather than its current price, a rough gauge of how much money has actually gone into the asset.
The trend holds at every scale. In 2011, roughly $5 million in new money was enough to double bitcoin’s price. This cycle, doing the same took around $101 billion. Each run has demanded exponentially more capital for a smaller percentage move, the arithmetic of an asset that now carries a market value near $1.2 trillion, per CoinDesk data, rather than the few billion it held a decade ago.
CryptoQuant founder Ki Young Ju, who published the data, called it as a case for patience rather than a top. “Bitcoin needs to be a core macro asset, not just a retail-driven ETF trade,” he wrote, arguing that another parabolic run is possible only if bitcoin can absorb more than $1 trillion in fresh capital, which would take institutional adoption well beyond where it sits today.
That argument lands at an awkward moment. U.S. spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds have seen record outflows over the past month, and bitcoin closed a losing first half, so the retail flows the thesis wants to move past are running in reverse rather than building the institutional depth it calls for.
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