Bitcoin’s price action is showing signs of a new market structure emerging, one driven less by speculative sentiment and increasingly by ETF-based investor cost cycles that appear to be dictating the tempo of rallies and resets.
The shift is becoming clearer as the Fed’s easing path slows, putting structural flows rather than headline catalysts at the center of crypto’s next phase.
What Happened
In a note sent to Yellow.com Nexo’s Iliya Kalchev captured the broad macro backdrop, stating that the Fed delivered another 25-basis-point cut, but a divided vote and neutral language steadied markets rather than ignited them.
Crypto held firm as equities softened, with Bitcoin consolidating near $90,000 while ETF inflows continued, adding $223 million on the day.
Ethereum and other majors like SOL and BNB saw similar steady engagement despite modest pullbacks.
But the deeper structural story comes from flow data.
According to research reviewed in Coppe research, Bitcoin has repeatedly retraced toward ETF holder cost basis since early 2024, forming a pattern that has already played out three times.
Each cycle has produced sizable expansions, often between 60 and 80%, before resetting cleanly back to the average on-chain cost for newly onboarded ETF participants.
These moves are not explained by the halving or by traditional crypto reflexivity and instead, they line up directly with institutional rebalancing rhythms and inflow periods.
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Kalchev notes that market participants are currently prioritizing hedging and risk management over speculative positioning, reinforcing Bitcoin’s sensitivity to upcoming macro data rather than narrative-driven catalysts.
Why It Matters
The Fed’s characterization of policy as “within a broad range of neutral,” paired with selective easing globally, suggests liquidity may expand in smaller steps.
That environment places greater weight on structural demand, particularly ETF contributions and less on one-off events.
Flows into Ethereum, Solana, and XRP also signal a similar dynamic: pullbacks in spot prices are not matched by withdrawals in ETF or ETP demand.
Instead, interest remains steady and selective, aligning with what the cost-basis framework implies, that inflows, not hype cycles, are now the core driver of price resilience.
As markets head into a data-heavy period, from jobless claims to U.S. CPI, the key question is no longer whether the halving will dictate Bitcoin’s trajectory, but whether ETF cost-basis cycles will accelerate or pause under shifting liquidity conditions.
Early evidence suggests they may be the defining structure of the next phase of digital asset markets.

