Grayscale states bluntly that while cryptocurrency is not as old as it once was, it is still incredibly small compared to its potential.
Currently, tokenized assets represent approximately 0.1% of the global bond and stock markets. In the base case of Grayscale, this number does not increase at all; instead, it explodes, potentially increasing 1,000-fold by 2030, as infrastructure expands and regulations cease to function as a constant drag.
The market is evolving
The digital asset market capitalization has already shifted from a market solely focused on Bitcoin to a broader multi-sector market, where non-Bitcoin assets are gradually gaining market share. Instead of growing in a simple domination-rotation loop, Bitcoin and other crypto sectors now grow in parallel on a logarithmic scale. This, in itself, challenges the conventional theory of the four-year cycle.
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Two pillars support Grayscale’s thesis. Macro pressure first. The US government’s debt/GDP ratio is reaching historical levels linked to the risk of currency devaluation. Programmatically scarce assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum are monetary alternatives in this context, not just riskier assets. For this reasoning to be valid, all that is needed is a persistent budgetary drift; hyperinflation is not.
Regulation is the main obstacle
The second is regulation. In 2026, Grayscale anticipates the enactment of bipartisan U.S. legislation relating to the structure of the cryptocurrency market. The price movement is not that important. On-chain issuance, regulated trading of digital asset securities, and large-scale institutional participation are all enabled by clear regulations. ETFs were the first step. The second step is plumbing the broader market.
Where does growth really end? According to Grayscale, the main beneficiaries of tokenization and on-chain finance are smart contract platforms like Ethereum, BNB, Solana and Avalanche. Underneath it all is Chainlink, which serves as middleware to enable the use of real-world data on public blockchains.
Importantly, Grayscale argues that the four-year clean cycle could end in 2026. The growth of exchange-traded products, the maturation of institutional allocation procedures, and the direct integration of on-chain assets into traditional finance are all contributing to slower, more stable, and structurally skewed bottom-up capital flows.


