If you're wondering why Bitcoin (BTC) feels different this time around, you're not alone. According to analyst Kevin, the current cycle has almost nothing in common with what traders experienced in 2021, and the reason comes down to a fundamental misreading of Bitcoin's historical structure.
April Was the Real Peak, Not November
In a recent post on X, Kevin makes a provocative claim: Bitcoin's actual cycle top happened in April 2021, not the widely cited November peak. His reasoning? Nearly every major framework points that way. Technical indicators, on-chain signals, macro conditions, money flows, sentiment, and momentum all topped out in April.
What happened after that? Kevin describes the July through November 2021 move as a textbook bear-market rally. It had all the hallmarks: low volume, weak inflows, and crucially, most altcoins couldn't break new highs. He even points to the heavily promoted Bitcoin podcast featuring Elon Musk, Jack Dorsey, and Cathie Wood, which aired precisely at the July 2021 bottom, as evidence the rally was more narrative-fueled than structurally sound.
When a trader asked Kevin to clarify whether he meant the bull market was over or just beginning, he emphasized he was simply presenting analysis, not investment advice.
A Fundamentally Different Environment
The bigger picture is what makes this cycle unique. In a recent podcast, Kevin highlighted something unprecedented: for the first time in Bitcoin's history, global net liquidity has been falling for multiple years. Inflation pressures, aggressive rate hikes, and quantitative tightening have all squeezed the system, suppressing money flow, momentum, and upside potential.
Looking ahead, Kevin sees two possible scenarios. Either liquidity breaks higher in 2026, snapping the traditional four-year cycle and pushing Bitcoin up after a near-term bottom. Or the four-year cycle holds, Bitcoin enters a shallow bear market, and then rallies once monetary policy finally loosens.
The signals to watch? Inflation trends, PMI shifts, Fed rate cuts, the end of quantitative tightening, and the appointment of a new Fed chair.
Kevin's current assessment is cautiously optimistic. Market conditions are improving compared to the prior week. Spot volume is rising while perpetual futures volume and open interest are declining. Funding rates have edged lower, and premiums, though still negative, are beginning to recover.