Bitcoin Market Cap Rebound Could Restore Lost Rank in 5–10 Years

18-Jun-2026 Crypto Breaking News
Bitcoin Market Cap Rebound Could Restore Lost Rank In 5–10 Years

Bitcoin has slipped further in the global rankings of the largest assets by market capitalization, falling to 15th place and losing roughly half of its value versus its all-time high reached in October last year. The move highlights how prolonged risk-off conditions in crypto can quickly change BTC’s relative position even when the asset remains among the biggest in the world.

At the time of the latest ranking, CompaniesMarketCap lists Bitcoin as the 15th largest macro asset, while TradingView data puts BTC’s market capitalization at about $1.287 trillion—around 25% below where it stood a year earlier. Compared with its October all-time high, Bitcoin’s market cap is down by approximately 50%.

Key takeaways

  • Bitcoin ranks 15th globally by market cap, down 10 places over roughly a year.
  • BTC’s market cap is about $1.287 trillion, around 25% lower than a year ago, per TradingView.
  • From its October all-time high, Bitcoin’s market cap is down about 50%.
  • One market view suggests the current bear market may be nearing the point where it is “70% through,” based on historical framing.
  • Analysts point to evolving technical levels—an established February floor being treated as a later ceiling.

Bitcoin’s market-cap slide changes its global ranking

Instead of focusing purely on BTC/USD price, this latest shift tracks how Bitcoin’s size has moved within the broader universe of publicly followed assets. According to CompaniesMarketCap, Bitcoin is now positioned behind a group of larger global companies and commodities, illustrating the compounding effect of sustained drawdowns.

TradingView’s market capitalization figures show BTC at roughly 25% below its level from one year ago, while the distance from the October all-time high is larger—about a 50% decline. The scale of the drop matters because market cap rankings are relative: even if BTC’s decline is mirrored elsewhere in markets, other assets can still outperform, pushing Bitcoin down the list.

The ranking movement is also not theoretical. In April 2025, a referenced snapshot from ColinTalksCrypto on X placed Bitcoin at 5th by market cap, citing a market cap of $1.86 trillion at the time, ahead of several widely tracked global firms and also surpassing the market value of major entities referenced in that post.

“This is the nature of a volatile asset that outpaces other assets in the long run,” ColinTalksCrypto said in the X post that accompanied the earlier ranking.

ColinTalksCrypto also suggested that returning to the top five would likely take years, framing Bitcoin’s behavior as characteristic of a volatile asset rather than a slow-and-steady mover among established global benchmarks.

How long until Bitcoin could regain the top five?

Beyond the present ranking, the discussion turns to timing. ColinTalksCrypto predicted Bitcoin could reach the top five again within a 5–10 year window, noting the asset’s long-run behavior versus other macro holdings. While the claim is a forecast rather than a measurable obligation, it aligns with the broader reality that ranking recoveries typically require either sustained market upside, significant revaluation of BTC relative to peers, or both.

As of now, the largest cryptocurrency’s position implies that any rebound large enough to restore a top-five market cap placement would need to be substantial—not just a partial recovery. Put differently, even returning to “less-bearish” price action may not be enough if other global assets continue compounding while Bitcoin remains depressed.

Traders point to a technical “floor” and a contested path

Price-level narratives in the market also continue to evolve. In April 2025, BTC/USD printed a low for the year amid uncertainty tied to US international trade tariffs. The low around $74,500 later held until early this year, after which another bottom zone formed in February.

According to trader and analyst Rekt Capital, the February base is now being used as a reference for how subsequent price action may behave. In a recent X post, Rekt Capital summarized the idea that “The February BTC floor is acting as the June ceiling.” In practical terms, this is a trader’s way of saying that a level that once defined downside support has shifted into resistance behavior at later points in the chart cycle.

“The February BTC floor is acting as the June ceiling,” Rekt Capital wrote on X.

That framing matters for traders because it implies asymmetry: attempts to push higher may face selling pressure, while a retest of the earlier floor could become a key decision point for whether the market is truly basing or simply pausing before another leg down.

Bear-market debate intensifies as timing targets circulate

Technical readings are occurring alongside debate over whether Bitcoin’s move away from multiyear lows is likely to extend or if the market will revert to a more bearish structure. Earlier coverage from Cointelegraph noted that opinions diverge on whether BTC will continue its rebound or drop again to resume the bear market.

Rekt Capital is among the traders leaning toward continuation of bearish conditions based on historical patterns. In another X post this week, the analyst suggested Bitcoin is “very soon” 70% through its current bear market—an interpretation that, if it proves directionally right, would place key risk windows further out rather than immediately near the last swing low.

“Bitcoin will very soon be 70% through its current Bear Market,” Rekt Capital told followers on X.

These percentage-style forecasts are not precise calendars—bear market phases are identified through patterns rather than guaranteed milestones. Still, they influence positioning because traders look for confirmations such as trend structure, retest outcomes, and whether resistance levels continue to reject rallies.

For now, investors and active traders should watch two things: whether BTC can overcome the resistance behavior implied by the “February floor as June ceiling” idea, and whether the market’s broader cycle interpretation—such as the “70% through” bear-market view—finds support in subsequent chart structure rather than being disproven by a sustained upside breakout.

This article was originally published as Bitcoin Market Cap Rebound Could Restore Lost Rank in 5–10 Years on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.

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