TL;DR:
Renowned Fundstrat analyst Tom Lee assured that the most recent “bloodthirsty” drop in digital markets is not the start of a traditional crypto winter. He added that we are facing a necessary rebalancing motivated by external factors and not by a structural weakness in the ecosystem.
Speaking of performance, Ethereum experienced a correction of around 65% since last October, a figure that typically precedes periods of accumulation. However, global capitalization remains resilient because, for the first time, this drop is occurring independently of a crash in equities.
Historical data indicates that the winters of 2018 and 2022 were closely linked to Fed rate hikes and rampant inflation that crushed both stocks and digital assets. At present, the stock market has not suffered a similar debacle, marking a fundamental divergence in price behavior.
Lee highlighted that the initial catalyst was a massive deleveraging event on October 10th, which eliminated excess speculative positions. This “cleansing” move is seen by many technical analysts as an essential step toward resuming a sustainable bullish trend.

In addition to the technical factor, the increase in war tensions related to Iran is generating additional pressure on risk assets. This macroeconomic noise caused many investors to seek temporary haven, affecting the immediate liquidity of the market’s main cryptocurrencies.
On the other hand, an increasing correlation is observed between Bitcoin and software and artificial intelligence stocks, implying that volatility in the tech sector quickly transfers to crypto. Nonetheless, Lee insists that this relationship is situational and does not reflect a loss of confidence in blockchain technology.
While sentiment on social media remains negative, the cryptographic market infrastructure remains intact and functional. There is no deep financial crisis or imminent global recession that justifies, from Fundstrat’s perspective, the entry into a prolonged or structural bear market.
It is worth noting that market cycles usually go through “cleaning” phases where weak hands abandon their positions in the face of uncertainty. This phenomenon allows large institutional investors to find more attractive entry points, strengthening price support in the medium term.
Tom Lee suggests that we are facing a transitory “mini-winter,” necessary to balance the market after periods of excessive euphoria. Once macroeconomic uncertainty dissipates and the impact of deleveraging is fully absorbed, the crypto sector could be ready for a phase of stabilization and subsequent recovery.