Bitcoin’s value has fallen sharply since hitting record highs last month, above $126,000 in early October. (Photo by Justin TALLIS / AFP via Getty Images)
AFP via Getty Images
When Bitcoin fell nearly 24% in November, from an all-time high above $126,000 to a low near $80,500, headlines focused on ETF outflows, changing Fed signals, and the return of macroeconomic-driven volatility. But behind the price action, another story has been unfolding: the quiet resilience and, in some cases, advancement of Bitcoin’s fundamental financial infrastructure.
While retail narratives focused on short-term losses, institutional allocators and ecosystem architects were observing something more structural. Three distinct approaches to unlocking Bitcoin productivity – centralized bridging, decentralized bridging, and native programmability – each responded differently to stress. And in those reactions, they revealed not only their current viability, but also the path that institutions might take as Bitcoin evolves from a store of value to a capital-efficient asset class.
Silent change: from price developments to productivity
With over $2.1 trillion in total market value, Bitcoin remains the largest digital asset in the world. Yet only 0.1% of this capital is currently deployed in DeFi, according to research firm Mintlayer. For institutions managing large BTC holdings, the question is not whether to own Bitcoin, but rather whether Bitcoin can do more.
Three architectural avenues emerged to answer this question:
- Centralized bridgingwhere assets like WBTC are issued through custodians and integrated into existing DeFi systems
- Decentralized bridgeexemplified by protocols like tBTC, which use cryptographic threshold networks to eliminate single points of custody
- Native execution of smart contractsas proposed by OP_NET, which aims to bring programmability directly to Bitcoin Layer 1
Each model made different compromises. And during the turbulence of November, these differences became visible.
tBTC: a decentralized alternative comes of age
Among the most closely watched infrastructure movements are: Threshold networkwhich manages tBTC. In mid-November, the protocol launched a gasless, single-transaction minting feature designed to simplify integration across six chains, targeting the very friction points that have historically deterred institutional users.
Despite the massive sell-off, the entire value of tBTC is stuck remained stable in terms of BTC, with usage continuing to grow. According to a statement from the protocol team, more than $50 million in tBTC was deposited into delta-neutral vaults like Yield Basis during the correction, a sign that some institutions viewed volatility not as a warning sign, but as an entry point.
“Institutions are taking advantage of this moment to maximize their exposure to BTC,” said MacLane Wilkison, co-founder of Threshold. Many are seeking yield exposure while retaining the Bitcoin denomination, especially in environments where traditional yield options have become compressed. The new upgrade also enabled cross-chain movements with much less friction, allowing institutions to move between ecosystems to obtain better rates or liquidity, MacLane said.
tBTC’s model, based on decentralized custody via threshold cryptography, also offers a path to self-custody. A new feature, expected to launch in the coming months, would allow institutional participants to hold BTC to support their tBTC without commingling funds, providing a notable differentiator in a compliance-sensitive environment.
OP_NET: the arguments in favor of native programmability
As decks debate guard models, OP_NET takes a more fundamental approach by bringing full programmability to Bitcoin Layer 1 without bridges or wrapped assets. Its founders argue that Bitcoin DeFi should not require leaving Bitcoin’s trust model in the first place.
The protocol testnet has already seen over 1.7 million interactionswith 176 contracts deployed using a custom WebAssembly environment. Unlike most smart contract systems, OP_NET uses BTC as gasand processes transactions natively using Bitcoin’s proof-of-work consensus.
The system was designed to handle volatility. Its consensus model, which scales throughput linearly as more nodes join, showed stability under simulated constraints including congestion, latency spikes, and fee volatility. “We designed scalability from security,” said co-founder Samuel Patt. “Instead of outsourcing security to bridges or L2s, we extended Bitcoin’s native functionality to directly support compute.”
OP_NET also takes a position on the token economy that deviates from current DeFi standards: it does not have a native token. The goal is to make BTC productive on its own terms, with fees going to miners and without introducing new asset layers. The move reflects growing institutional skepticism toward token-based incentives that are often decoupled from network utility.
Context: WBTC still dominates in terms of liquidity
As the new infrastructure gains momentum, Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC) still represents the lion’s share of Bitcoin used in DeFi with $10.98 billion in locked value and a consistent footprint in Ethereum-based applications.
WBTC tracked the price correction but saw no major outflows, indicating that its users, largely DeFi-native institutions and DAOs, remained in position. But the centralized custody model, anchored by BitGo, has also come under new scrutiny. With no public comments from the WBTC DAO or custodians during the withdrawal, concerns about communication and single points of failure resurfaced.
“WBTC’s dependence on centralized custodians becomes a liability in times of volatility,” note crypto analyst @pinnaklz. “This fragments Bitcoin’s security model and concentrates risks in a few hands.”
Read market signals
While ETF products saw $3.79 billion in outflows, on-chain behavior painted a different picture. Foreign exchange reserves abandoned of 580,000 BTC, reaching its lowest level in several years. Analysts do not interpret this as panic, but as a move towards direct guarding, possibly in preparation for more active deployments in protocols like tBTC or exploratory use of native platforms like OP_NET.
Social sentiment also began to change. In community and institutional circles, there has been a notable increase in discourse around decentralization, trust models, and programmability. The debate is no longer whether Bitcoin should enter DeFi, but rather how it will do so without compromising its principles.
Bitcoin’s November sell-off offered much more than just a price reset. It provided field testing of the infrastructure that will support the asset’s next phase of growth.
Centralized wrappers like WBTC maintain liquidity dominance, but with visible tradeoffs. Decentralized protocols like tBTC are gaining credibility, particularly as bridges to compliance. And native L1 initiatives like OP_NET could yet unlock a new class of Bitcoin-based applications that don’t require leaving Bitcoin at all.
For institutions managing billions of BTC, the conclusion is clear: the infrastructure you choose determines whether your Bitcoin simply stays put or works.



