Contrary to a front-loaded boom, traditional ETF launches show that year-two inflows typically surpass year one. This is because large institutions require long due diligence periods before investing and early buyers tend to add to their positions over time, a pattern crypto ETFs are expected to follow.

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The SEC's shift to "generic listing standards" for crypto ETFs removes the bespoke, lengthy approval process for each fund. This mirrors a historical rule change in traditional finance that led to a 4X increase in ETF launches, signaling an imminent explosion of diverse crypto products.

Crypto ETFs serve as an off-chain layer for investment transactions, separating speculative trading from on-chain utility. This reduces network congestion and allows the base layer protocol to focus on real-world applications, which is a net positive for its long-term health.

Unlike assets like commodities or private markets where institutions pioneer adoption, cryptocurrencies saw retail investors lead the charge. Institutions are only now slowly beginning to explore allocations, reversing the historical trend of top-down financial innovation.

The acceptable crypto allocation for institutional investors has significantly increased, moving from a previously standard 1% to as high as 4%. This shift is driven by a fundamental change in perception: the binary 'go-to-zero' risk of crypto is no longer a primary concern for major allocators.

Assets like Solana occupy a much larger space in investor consciousness and media coverage than their market caps suggest. This means even small inflows into a potential Solana ETF could have a disproportionately large and positive impact on its price compared to assets like Bitcoin or Ethereum.

The predictable four-year crypto cycle isn't random. It's explained by two parallel forces: a macro trend tracking global M2 money supply fluctuations, and a micro, commodity-like pattern of supply shocks, speculative bubbles, and subsequent crashes.

The primary driver of Bitcoin's recent appreciation isn't hardcore believers, but mainstream speculators who bought ETFs. These investors lack ideological commitment and will rush for the exits during a downturn, creating a mass liquidation event that the market's limited liquidity cannot absorb.

TradFi investors, who often lack specific crypto knowledge, will favor broad index-based ETFs. This will channel passive capital disproportionately into the largest market-cap assets, creating a reflexive loop that concentrates value at the top, much like the 'Magnificent Seven' phenomenon in US equities.

The predictable four-year cycle tied to Bitcoin's halving events is over. The launch of spot ETFs has put Bitcoin "on the global stage," fundamentally changing its characteristics, including volatility and drawdown profile. Investors still clinging to the old cycle model will be caught off guard.

While Exchange-Traded Products (ETPs) make crypto accessible, they present a liquidity paradox. The underlying spot crypto markets are actually more liquid and trade 24/7 globally, whereas ETFs are confined to standard market hours—a crucial difference for active traders.