By now, most people in the cryptocurrency market know that long-term investing is the key to sustainable returns. The asset class is notoriously volatile, and a buy-and-hold strategy helps smooth out the booms and busts to let its fundamental growth drivers shine through.
For Bitcoin (BTC 0.43%), this mindset is particularly important. The world’s leading cryptocurrency reached its all-time high of $126,000 in October last year before falling 39% as of the time of this writing.
Investors are eager to know what factors could drive its eventual recovery. Let’s dig deeper to see what the next three years could hold.
Why did Bitcoin crash?
On the surface, the crypto’s correction is surprising considering the recent tailwinds for digital assets. Under President Donald Trump, the U.S. has moved away from lawsuits and enforcement toward a more accepting stance that prioritizes clarity. The creation of a Bitcoin strategic reserve and new legislation also helped push the crypto into the mainstream, making institutional investors more comfortable holding it.
Furthermore, the war in Iran raised some investors’ hopes that the digital coin might act as a safe haven against economic risk — similar to the role played by U.S. Treasury bonds and precious metals like gold, which tend to rise during times of global uncertainty and inflation. Unfortunately for the bulls, these scenarios didn’t play out as expected.
Instead of performing like a safe haven, Bitcoin is acting more like a traditional risk asset — posting a rising correlation with technology stocks as measured by the Nasdaq-100 (although it tends to be more volatile).
This trend suggests that crypto is becoming more integrated into mainstream finance and will benefit from the same factors that benefit other risk assets, such as lower interest rates and overall economic growth. While the near-term situation is challenging, stocks have always bounced back over the long term. And if the trend holds, Bitcoin should as well.
Image source: Getty Images.
Why is Bitcoin different?
When it comes to long-term cryptocurrency investing, the asset you pick can make a huge difference in your returns. Speculative meme coins like Dogecoin or Shiba Inu can post explosive returns in the near term, but their volatility can lead to underwhelming long-term results.
As the first cryptocurrency, however, Bitcoin has established a first-mover advantage, which contributes to its brand recognition among large financial institutions (such as university endowments, hedge funds, and family offices) that might be hesitant to put funds into less-trusted assets.
Adoption is rising rapidly. According to cryptocurrency data platform Arkham, inflows into spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) totaled $823 million last week alone. And on top of helping support prices, this trend could reduce volatility by increasing the influence of stable deep-pocketed institutions that are less likely to panic and sell compared to retail investors.

Today’s Change
(-0.43%) $-328.18
Current Price
$75984.00
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.5T
Day’s Range
$75103.00 – $77808.00
52wk Range
$60255.56 – $126079.89
Volume
43B
What will the next three years have in store?
Bitcoin tends to behave like a risk asset. And that means the rest of 2026 could be challenging as the war in Iran promises to keep inflation high and delay the Federal Reserve’s timeline for lowering interest rates.
Meanwhile, with a Shiller price-to-earnings ratio (CAPE) of 40, stocks trade at historically high valuations, raising the possibility of downside.
While Bitcoin isn’t directly tied to the stock market, its rising correlation with equities suggests a drop in investor sentiment could pressure both asset classes simultaneously.
But while we don’t know how long these headwinds will last, it’s safe to assume they won’t last forever. Mainstream institutional investors are becoming increasingly comfortable with crypto, and Bitcoin’s trusted brand helps it stand out. Three years from now, the asset is fully capable of recapturing its previous highs and possibly pushing new ones. In fact, I expect Bitcoin to do that.
