Bitcoin’s Boring Phase Is the Setup
In a recent report, Hougan pointed to macro thinker Jordi Visser’s analogy that bitcoin is undergoing a “silent IPO.”
Like Facebook’s post-IPO lull, bitcoin’s sideways action marks a transition — early believers cashing out while institutions build positions. “Visser argues that bitcoin is going through a ‘silent IPO,’ graduating from crazy idea to mainstream success,” Hougan noted.
The Bitwise executive emphasized that this distribution phase doesn’t mean weakness. He compared it to Facebook’s early years after going public, when shares traded flat before soaring more than 1,500%. For bitcoin, he said, the dynamic is similar: “Once the OGs are done selling, bitcoin doesn’t need anything. The only thing necessary for bitcoin to go from a $2.5 trillion market cap to $25 trillion—gold’s size—is broad acceptance.”
According to Hougan, the real story is that bitcoin (BTC) has matured. With spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) now trading on Wall Street, corporations adding bitcoin to reserves, and sovereign funds buying in, the asset has entered a new era. He argues that the reduction in bitcoin’s volatility since ETF approval in early 2024 underscores its evolution from a speculative bet to a legitimate macro asset class.
Hougan contends that bitcoin’s maturation demands a rethinking of portfolio strategy. “The days of a 1% allocation to bitcoin are over,” he said. “Increasingly, investors need to be thinking of 5% as a starting point.”
Lower volatility, he noted, makes it safer for investors to increase exposure. “Put differently, lower volatility means it’s safer to own more of something,” Hougan wrote, stressing that investors who once tiptoed into the asset class now have room to wade deeper.
Why It Feels Like an IPO — and Why That’s Bullish
In Hougan’s view, bitcoin’s current stagnation mirrors the cooling-off period that often follows the initial hype of a public offering. Early risk-takers cash out, while mainstream money takes time to accumulate. Once that transition stabilizes, upward momentum resumes — and this time, the climb could be institutional in scale.
He adds that unlike startups still building revenue, bitcoin’s growth is more about adoption. “If you take the long view, bitcoin chopping sideways is a gift,” Hougan wrote. “I see it as an opportunity to buy more bitcoin before it resumes its ascent.”
Hougan’s message is clear: bitcoin’s quiet phase is its coming-of-age moment. As it graduates from speculative novelty to institutional cornerstone, the CIO of Bitwise believes this is less a pause — and more a prelude to the next major allocation wave.
FAQ ❓
- What does Matt Hougan mean by bitcoin’s silent IPO?
Hougan says bitcoin’s current stagnation mirrors a company’s post-IPO phase, marking a transition to mainstream adoption. - Why does Hougan think bigger bitcoin allocations make sense now?
He argues that lower volatility and rising institutional demand make bitcoin safer to own in larger proportions. - What allocation percentage does Bitwise recommend for bitcoin exposure?
Hougan said investors should now view 5% allocations as a realistic starting point instead of 1%. - How does bitcoin’s ETF approval factor into this trend?
The launch of spot bitcoin ETFs in 2024 helped mature the market, reduce volatility, and attract institutional capital.
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