In November 2021, total crypto market capitalisation peaked at $3 trillion. By November 2022, FTX had collapsed, Sam Bankman-Fried had been arrested, Terra/Luna had wiped out $60 billion in value, Celsius had filed for bankruptcy, and more than $2 trillion in market value had evaporated. If you asked someone in late 2022 whether crypto was finished, a reasonable person could say yes.
It was not. And I want to make the argument that the crash was not just a temporary setback that the industry survived. It was a necessary and ultimately beneficial stress test that removed the conditions preventing crypto from becoming a legitimate asset class.
What the Crash Actually Revealed
The 2022 collapse was not primarily caused by speculative excess in the way that equity market corrections are caused by valuation reversion. It was caused by outright fraud, catastrophic risk mismanagement presented as innovation, and structural fragility in systems that had been claimed to be robust.
FTX was not a failed exchange. It was, according to a US federal court that convicted its founder, a criminal enterprise that used customer deposits as a personal slush fund. Celsius marketed itself as a crypto bank offering yield, while actually engaging in risky proprietary trading with customer deposits that it could not cover when the market turned. Terra/Luna was a stablecoin whose stability mechanism required continuous new capital inflows to maintain, which is the definitional structure of a Ponzi scheme.
The crash exposed all of this. Not because the market suddenly became sceptical but because the falling tide revealed what had been hidden by the rising water.
The Beneficial Consequences
Four years after the crash, looking at the crypto landscape in 2026, several genuinely positive structural changes are visible:
Regulatory clarity: The collapse of FTX accelerated regulation in ways that years of lobbying had not. The EU’s MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) framework came into force in 2024, establishing the world’s most comprehensive crypto regulatory framework. US crypto spot ETFs were approved in 2024. The regulatory clarity that was impossible while the industry claimed it was ungovernable became politically achievable after the damage from its unregulated state was visible.
Institutional participation: Bitcoin ETFs approved in the US in January 2024 opened the asset class to pension funds, endowments, and institutional allocators that had been blocked by the absence of regulated vehicles. The assets under management in crypto ETFs and institutional products have grown substantially since. This institutional participation brings more sophisticated risk management, more regulatory accountability, and more legitimate price discovery.
Proof-of-Work on proof: The crash tested blockchain networks themselves. Bitcoin and Ethereum continued operating without interruption throughout the crisis. The blockchains worked. The failures were centralised actors (exchanges, lending platforms) that claimed to be part of a decentralised system while operating with all the opacity of the institutions they claimed to disintermediate.
Survival of genuine utility: The projects and protocols that survived the crash and grew through the bear market were those with genuine utility: Ethereum’s smart contract platform, Chainlink’s oracle network, MakerDAO’s decentralised stablecoin. The projects built primarily around speculation and marketing disappeared. The assets that maintained development communities and growing usage through a two-year bear market demonstrated genuine staying power.
The Counter-Argument I Take Seriously
The case against my argument is that the crash did not change the fundamental speculation dynamics. Meme coins still launch and collapse. Unregistered securities still proliferate. New frauds replace old ones. The retail investors who lost money in 2022 were replaced by new retail investors who learned nothing from their predecessors’ experience.
This is partially correct. The same patterns recur in crypto because the same human tendencies recur: the desire for fast returns, the difficulty of distinguishing genuine innovation from marketing, and the persuasive power of social proof in financial markets. Regulation and institutional participation reduce but do not eliminate these patterns.
What Changed and What Did Not
The market structure that exists in 2026 is genuinely different from the one that existed in 2021. Centralised exchanges operate under regulatory oversight in the US and EU. Proof-of-reserves requirements (however imperfect) have become standard. Spot ETFs with proper custody and auditing provide institutional-grade access. The systemic risk from unregulated, leveraged centralised lending platforms has been significantly reduced by the removal of the most reckless actors.
What has not changed is the fundamental volatility, the speculative fringe of the market, and the periodic emergence of new schemes that exploit the same vulnerabilities in human financial psychology. The crash cleaned up the existing frauds. It did not permanently immunise the market against new ones.
The Honest Version of the Legitimacy Claim
My argument is not that crypto became legitimate because of the crash. It is that the crash removed conditions that were preventing legitimacy, primarily the regulatory impossibility and institutional exclusion that came from allowing an unregulated, fraud-ridden market to operate with impunity.
Bitcoin’s credibility as a store of value is more defensible in 2026 after four years of regulatory development, institutional ETF products, and the demonstrated separation of Bitcoin’s resilience from the collapses of the centralised intermediaries built around it. Ethereum’s credibility as a programmable settlement layer is more defensible after the transition to proof of stake and four years of additional smart contract ecosystem development.
Neither of these developments happened because of the crash. But both were accelerated by the political and regulatory change that only became possible after the human cost of the unregulated market became impossible for legislators to ignore.
The Question for 2026
The more interesting question than whether the crash was necessary is whether the conditions created by the crash’s aftermath are sufficient for crypto to fulfil its originally claimed potential. The infrastructure is more legitimate. The regulatory framework is more developed. The institutional access is more mature.
Whether the technology ultimately delivers on the decentralisation, financial inclusion, and programmatic economic infrastructure it has promised remains genuinely open. The crash cleared the debris that was making that evaluation impossible. The evaluation now is cleaner and the scepticism, in either direction, is more earned.
What caused the 2022 crypto crash?
The 2022 crash was primarily driven by three related collapses: the Terra/Luna algorithmic stablecoin failure (wiping $60 billion in value), the Celsius Network bankruptcy (revealed as risky proprietary trading with customer deposits), and the FTX exchange collapse (subsequently proven in court to have been criminal fraud). These were compounded by rising interest rates that reduced speculative appetite broadly.
What happened after the 2022 crypto crash?
Regulatory clarity increased significantly: the EU’s MiCA framework came into force in 2024, US crypto spot ETFs were approved in January 2024, and global regulatory frameworks for crypto exchanges and custody developed substantially. Institutional participation through ETFs grew. The centralised lending and exchange platforms most exposed as fragile or fraudulent were removed from the market.
Is cryptocurrency legitimate in 2026?
More so than in 2021. Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETFs trade on major US exchanges. Institutional custody and auditing standards are established. Regulatory frameworks in the EU (MiCA) and increasingly in the US provide legal clarity. The systemic risk from unregulated centralised platforms is reduced. Significant speculative volatility and fraudulent schemes persist.
What was FTX and why did it collapse?
FTX was a major cryptocurrency exchange founded by Sam Bankman-Fried. A US court found it had misused customer funds for proprietary trading through affiliated firm Alameda Research, used customer deposits as collateral for loans, and could not return customer funds when a bank run began in November 2022. Bankman-Fried was convicted on seven counts of fraud and conspiracy.
What is the MiCA regulation for crypto?
MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) is the EU’s comprehensive crypto regulatory framework that came into force in 2024. It establishes requirements for crypto asset service providers, stablecoin issuers, and asset-referenced tokens. It is the most comprehensive crypto regulatory framework globally and provides the legal clarity for EU-based crypto businesses that the sector lacked previously.
Did the crypto crash help or hurt the industry long-term?
Long-term, the crash appears to have been structurally beneficial by forcing regulatory development, removing fraudulent actors, demonstrating the resilience of decentralised protocols versus centralised intermediaries, and creating the political conditions for institutional access through regulated ETF products. Short-term, it caused substantial financial harm to individuals who lost money in fraudulent or risk-misrepresented products.
The Debris Cleared. The Questions Remain.
The argument is not that the crash was good for everyone affected by it. For the people who lost savings to FTX fraud, Celsius mismanagement, or Terra/Luna collapse, the crash was a financial disaster with no silver lining. For the asset class as a whole, the structural changes it forced were beneficial in ways the industry could not have achieved voluntarily.
The open question is not whether crypto is more legitimate in 2026 than in 2021. It clearly is. The open question is whether the legitimacy achieved is sufficient for the technology to deliver on the claims made for it. That question remains genuinely undecided.