THE ARCH

Where Web3 founders, talent, and partners meet.

Daily Digest · Free
PLATFORM
  • Partners Directory
  • All Categories
  • Marketplace
  • Find a Partner
  • Docs
  • Escrow
INTELLIGENCE
  • Web3 News
  • Daily Digests
  • Intel Reports
  • Web3 Events
  • RSS Feed
  • Substack ↗
GET INVOLVED
  • Get Listed
  • Get Your Verified Badge
  • Submit an Event
  • Become an Operative
  • Refer a Client
  • Book a Call
COMPANY
  • About
  • How It Works
  • Manifesto
  • Media Kit
  • Privacy
  • Terms
© 2026 THE ARCH · All rights reserved.
PRIVACYTERMSCOOKIES
THE ARCH
THE ARCH

Where Web3 founders, talent, and partners meet.

Daily Digest · Free
PLATFORM
  • Partners Directory
  • All Categories
  • Marketplace
  • Find a Partner
  • Docs
  • Escrow
INTELLIGENCE
  • Web3 News
  • Daily Digests
  • Intel Reports
  • Web3 Events
  • RSS Feed
  • Substack ↗
GET INVOLVED
  • Get Listed
  • Get Your Verified Badge
  • Submit an Event
  • Become an Operative
  • Refer a Client
  • Book a Call
COMPANY
  • About
  • How It Works
  • Manifesto
  • Media Kit
  • Privacy
  • Terms
© 2026 THE ARCH · All rights reserved.
PRIVACYTERMSCOOKIES
THE ARCH
THE ARCH
Offers
POST A BRIEFJOIN AS PARTNER
News
Bitcoin's Halving Impact Diluted by Institutional ...
CryptoSlate•Monday, January 12, 2026 at 09:18 AM•1 min read

Bitcoin's Halving Impact Diluted by Institutional Factors: Report

Share:
The Arch TakeNeutral
BitcoinInstitutionalTrading

According to a CryptoSlate report, Bitcoin's traditional four-year cycle, driven by the halving, is being influenced by institutional factors. The halving, which reduces the supply of new Bitcoin, no longer holds exclusive power over Bitcoin's market dynamics. The investor base has broadened, access has improved, and price discovery now resembles mainstream risk markets. Factors like monetary policy and the introduction of Bitcoin ETFs are competing with the halving's impact, potentially overpowering it for extended periods. The report suggests that the traditional halving cycle may no longer be the primary driver of Bitcoin's price movements.

Read full story at CryptoSlate
Share:
📱

Never miss a Web3 update

Join our Telegram channel to receive news in real-time, straight to your phone.

Join Channel

Related News

SEC vs CFTC: Who Regulates Crypto?

The Block•1h ago

Balaji seeks Malaysia deal, threatens exit after Network School probe

Cointelegraph•3h ago

Bitcoin liquidity clusters determine BTC’s price direction as futures flow fuels price

Cointelegraph•4h ago

Polygon CEO announces job cuts amid Coinme acquisition

Cointelegraph•6h ago
← Back to News Feed
THE ARCH
Offers
POST A BRIEFJOIN AS PARTNER
News
Bitcoin's Halving Impact Diluted by Institutional ...
CryptoSlate•Monday, January 12, 2026 at 09:18 AM•1 min read

Bitcoin's Halving Impact Diluted by Institutional Factors: Report

Share:
The Arch TakeNeutral
BitcoinInstitutionalTrading

According to a CryptoSlate report, Bitcoin's traditional four-year cycle, driven by the halving, is being influenced by institutional factors. The halving, which reduces the supply of new Bitcoin, no longer holds exclusive power over Bitcoin's market dynamics. The investor base has broadened, access has improved, and price discovery now resembles mainstream risk markets. Factors like monetary policy and the introduction of Bitcoin ETFs are competing with the halving's impact, potentially overpowering it for extended periods. The report suggests that the traditional halving cycle may no longer be the primary driver of Bitcoin's price movements.

Read full story at CryptoSlate
Share:
📱

Never miss a Web3 update

Join our Telegram channel to receive news in real-time, straight to your phone.

Join Channel

Related News

SEC vs CFTC: Who Regulates Crypto?

The Block•1h ago

Balaji seeks Malaysia deal, threatens exit after Network School probe

Cointelegraph•3h ago

Bitcoin liquidity clusters determine BTC’s price direction as futures flow fuels price

Cointelegraph•4h ago

Polygon CEO announces job cuts amid Coinme acquisition

Cointelegraph•6h ago
← Back to News Feed