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Made fresh highs earlier this cycle, then pulled back without collapsing
Corrections were shallow compared to broader market weakness
Price action shows accumulation, not distribution
This is strength, not hype
Dash (DASH)
Extremely aggressive upside moves
Large short squeezes flushed leverage out of the system
Despite volatility, interest did not disappear after the spikes
That suggests real demand underneath the move
Zcash (ZEC)
Lagging short-term compared to XMR and DASH
Still relevant due to its position in regulatory discussions
Optional privacy keeps it in a unique category
The key point:
all of this happened while Bitcoin was under pressure and liquidity was being drained from risk assets.
Outperformance during fear is not accidental.
2. Why Privacy Assets Move Differently When Fear Increases
What I’m seeing is a decoupling.
During periods of high uncertainty — regulatory headlines, geopolitical tension, tightening controls — privacy coins often show lower correlation to BTC.
That tells me they’re being treated differently by the market.
Not as growth assets, but as:
Protection against financial surveillance
Insurance against forced transparency
A hedge against regulatory overreach
This places privacy coins in a category closer to digital cash, not speculative tech.
3. Regulation Isn’t Killing Privacy — It’s Creating Demand
The common narrative says regulation will destroy privacy coins.
I disagree.
In reality:
EU DAC8 expands crypto reporting aggressively
MiCA-driven delistings push privacy assets off centralized exchanges
U.S. compliance standards continue tightening
At the same time:
Most major economies are developing or piloting CBDCs
These systems are programmable, traceable, and controllable by design
The result is predictable:
when financial systems become more monitored, demand for private alternatives increases.
Delistings didn’t kill privacy coins — they filtered out weak hands.
4. Delistings Changed the User Base (In a Good Way)
When privacy coins were removed from many centralized exchanges:
Liquidity shifted to P2P, atomic swaps, and DEX-style solutions
Short-term speculators left
Long-term, ideologically aligned users stayed
That transition reduced noise and increased organic usage.
From a market structure perspective, that’s bullish — even if it doesn’t look exciting on the surface.
5. Crypto Is Splitting Into Two Philosophies
From my perspective, crypto in 2026 is no longer one unified movement.
It’s splitting:
Path One: Compliance & Integration
ETFs
Institutional custody
Regulated rails
TradFi alignment
Path Two: Sovereignty & Autonomy
Self-custody
Censorship resistance
Privacy by default
Cypherpunk values
Privacy coins sit firmly in the second camp.
And despite years of pushback, that camp is not shrinking.
6. Privacy Is No Longer Just “Coins”
Another important shift I’m watching:
privacy is evolving into an entire technology stack.
This includes:
Encrypted computation (FHE)
Zero-knowledge systems
Private DeFi
Confidential execution environments
Many of the most interesting projects here don’t even have tokens yet.
That usually means retail isn’t paying attention — which is exactly when structural trends form.
7. Risks Still Exist — This Isn’t a Free Trade
I don’t see this as risk-free.
There are real concerns:
Regulatory escalation can trigger volatility
Liquidity remains thin in some markets
Sharp pullbacks are part of the game
Narratives can cool quickly
Privacy assets are powerful — but they are not stable.
That’s the trade-off.
Final View: Privacy as a Structural Hedge
I don’t believe privacy coins are replacing Bitcoin.
I see them complementing it.
Bitcoin represents transparent, global settlement.
Privacy coins represent the ability to transact without exposure.
As:
Cash disappears
Surveillance expands
Financial behavior becomes increasingly monitored
privacy is being repriced.
This divergence isn’t driven by hype.
It’s driven by the world we’re moving into.
And that’s why I’m paying attention.