Crypto Adoption Continues Even As Bitcoin Stumbles

December 7, 2025

The embedded volatility of cryptocurrencies, and especially bitcoin, continues to appear front-and-center for investors as 2025 enters the home stretch. Following all-time-highs being achieved in October, over $125,000, bitcoin recently sunk to nearly $85,000 with this volatility sending ripple effects through the wider crypto investing community. Even as fears of a(nother) crypto winter are being discussed among mainstream media as well as crypto circles the reality is that crypto adoption, crypto utilization, and blockchain development continues to expand. One aspect that many investors, and especially newer investors that have only experienced the post-FTX bull market, seem to have forgotten is that bitcoin and crypto are an asset class.

Bitcoin was originally put forward, among other things, as a store of value and hedge against inflation and while this might have been an original pillar of the bitcoin maximalist community the facts on ground have disproven this fact. The greater penetration that crypto has obtained in investing and policy circles, the greater the correlation between crypto and other assets has become. Geopolitical tensions, interest rates in the United States and abroad, and economic sentiment have influenced most risk-on assets in a similar manner. Coupled with the jitters around AI valuations that were amplified by the recent “code red” memo penned by Sam Altman to and market selloffs of risk-on assets across the board are not unexpected.

Despite the headwinds however, several headlines should bolster investor sentiment as well map out what trends are set to dominate crypto investors as 2025 rolls forward to 2026.

Bitcoin’s Losses Are Stablecoins Gain

The very volatility that continues to drive investor sentiment lower and lead to outflows from bitcoin investing instruments is having an unexpected but surprisingly beneficial change in another sector of the crypto sector. During 2025, and even as the price of bitcoin hit all-time-highs, attracted policy support, and garnered increasing confidence from the mainstream media, stablecoins have quietly cinched policy wins that make bitcoin still resemble an emerging asset. Stablecoins were the core point and focus of the GENIUS Act, have gone mainstream and payment processors, financial institutions, and even states like Wyoming have issued native stablecoins and stabletokens.

Stablecoins were almost always marketed as the conservative on-ramp for crypto, and as bitcoin volatility reasserts itself, the growth and adoption of stablecoins continues to prove the strength of the position.

Wealth Management Continues To Pivot

Volatility is having another interesting effect in how bitcoin is treated from a wealth management and asset management perspective. While more recent investors and retail investors might see recent (downward) volatility as a sign of market weakness or signal to sell, institutional investors and/or investors with more experience are seemingly understanding it as a buy (or neutral) signal. Bank of America is the most recent wealth management firm, via its Merrill, Bank of America Private Bank, and Merrill Edge platforms, to endorse an official allocation level for digital assets for clients. Although presented in terms of digital assets more broadly, the banks investment strategists will also initiate coverage of ETF products in January, with all five (5) ETFs reported being bitcoin supported.

Wealth management and asset management may not always embrace the newest trends in investing opportunities, but the continued endorsements and (potential) fund flows that will result are another sign of the entrenchment of bitcoin as an asset class in its own right.

401k Adoption May Not Be Far Away

Vanguard, the $11 trillion asset management juggernaut, had long been firmly in the anti-crypto camp and had denied investors the opportunity to invest in those assets even as rivals have attracted billions in inflows by offerings products sooner. The pivot allows the 50 million clients access to regulated digital asset vehicles on its native mutual fund platform. While the firm has no plans at this time to launch products of their own, and will (reasonably) continue to bar products not specifically endorsed by the SEC, the shift in tone is evident.

This change on the brokerage side, when coupled with the forthcoming (2026) option that retirement plan managers will have the option to include crypto-linked products into 401(k) plans, Vanguard appears to be laying the groundwork for a bold move toward attracting crypto-interested investors. It remains to be seen how quickly adoption of crypto into 401k plans will come to fruition, the fact that Vanguard, after years of resistance, has moved toward a pro-crypto position, is sure to encourage others to follow suit.

Volatility is embedded of the crypto landscape, but adoption continues to accelerate among institutions and individuals alike.

 

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