Bitwise CEO Hunter Horsley says crypto is moving through a dot-com-style shakeout where fewer projects survive, but the strongest networks may become larger and more durable than early market expectations.
In an X post, Horsley compared today’s crypto market with the internet boom of the 1990s, when hundreds of companies reached $500 million to $1 billion valuations because investors believed almost every internet idea could work. By the early 2000s, that broad optimism had collapsed, leaving a smaller group of companies that had proven value through users, revenue, distribution and execution.
Horsley argued that crypto is now going through a similar transition. Projects that once traded on possibility alone are being forced to show traction, while capital is becoming more selective around networks, products and businesses with measurable demand. His core view is that “the number of winners will shrink,” but those that demonstrate value may operate longer and scale further than many traders expect.
The framing comes from one of the largest crypto asset managers in the U.S., making the dot-com comparison more than a retail-market slogan. Bitwise manages crypto funds and ETFs for investors looking for regulated exposure, so Horsley’s comments land directly inside the institutional debate over whether digital assets are still mostly speculative or now moving into a consolidation phase.
Market Is Moving From Narratives To Proof
The dot-com analogy fits the current crypto split between speculative token launches and infrastructure that is already carrying real activity. Stablecoins, tokenized assets, exchange-traded crypto products, onchain settlement, DeFi collateral, and high-fee blockchains are no longer judged only by whitepapers or roadmaps. They are increasingly measured by volume, revenue, liquidity, integrations, custody structure, and regulatory access.
That shift is visible in tokenization, where real-world asset data has become one of the clearest ways to separate adoption from marketing. Tokenized assets recently crossed $31 billion as productive collateral took center stage, while chain-level RWA inflows have started to show where institutions are actually moving value instead of only announcing pilots.
Stablecoins are another example. Circle’s recent 1 billion USDC mint on Solana showed how dollar liquidity is becoming part of crypto market plumbing for exchanges, payments, DeFi routing and institutional settlement. A large mint is not automatic buying pressure, but it does show that the market’s working-capital layer is still expanding even while token speculation remains uneven.
Fewer Winners Could Mean Larger Outcomes
Horsley’s view does not imply that every surviving crypto asset will repeat the path of Amazon or Google. The dot-com comparison cuts both ways because the internet bubble also produced large losses, dead companies and years of investor fatigue before the strongest platforms dominated.
The crypto version of that test is likely to be harsher for projects without real users, fee demand, liquidity, compliance paths, developer activity or defensible infrastructure. A token can trade actively for years without building durable value, but the next phase of institutional allocation is less likely to reward every narrative equally.
The strongest projects may benefit from the opposite effect. If capital concentrates into fewer assets, networks with real settlement demand, deep liquidity, clear revenue, institutional wrappers or hard-to-replace infrastructure could command a larger share of crypto’s long-term value. That is the part of Horsley’s dot-com analogy that keeps the argument bullish even while it sounds selective.
The market is already moving in that direction. ETF flows have become one of the clearest institutional demand gauges, tokenized asset dashboards are tracking where real value settles, and stablecoin issuance is revealing which networks can support active financial activity. Horsley’s comparison puts that shift into a simple frame: crypto may still have too many projects, but the survivors could define a much larger market than the last cycle priced in.



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