2026-5-11 11:51 |
Crypto DCA works well, but DeFi infrastructure still complicates automated investing. CoinFello simplifies DeFi dollar-cost averaging through conversational, non-custodial automation tools. DCA as a strategy has held up across decades of market cycles because the underlying logic is sound.
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is one of the most thoroughly studied approaches to long-term investing, with its mechanics being quite straightforward, i.e., instead of trying to call market bottoms or time entries, an investor commits to buying a fixed dollar amount of an asset at regular intervals, letting the purchase price average out over time.
In volatile markets, this tends to produce better outcomes than discretionary timing specifically.
This is partly because it removes emotion from the equation and partly because it sidesteps the statistical near-impossibility of consistently buying at lows.
The evidence for this is well-documented, as research into Bitcoin DCA strategies has found that investors who purchased fixed amounts of BTC on a weekly basis over any rolling four-year window since 2015 came out ahead in nearly every scenario, even when the entry point coincided with a local price peak.
That pattern has held through multiple market cycles, including the sharp correction of 2022 and the subsequent recovery into 2024 and 2025.
Meanwhile, a 2025 Fidelity survey found that among retail investors who describe themselves as long-term crypto holders, the most common strategy cited was some form of regular, fixed-amount purchasing rather than active trading.
The argument for DCA in crypto is, if anything, stronger than in traditional equities, precisely because the volatility that makes single-entry timing so risky also creates the conditions where spread-out purchasing tends to perform best.
In 2025 alone, Bitcoin moved from below $50,000 in the early part of the year to above $100,000 mid-cycle before experiencing a significant pullback.
For anyone attempting to time that range, the experience was punishing, but for anyone buying at fixed intervals throughout, the results were considerably more manageable.
Why DeFi turns a simple habit into a technical projectThe disconnect here is worth spelling out, because it is more structural than it might appear at first.
This is because a traditional brokerage’s recurring investment feature involves two steps, i.e., choosing the asset and setting the frequency (while the platform handles everything else).
The DeFi equivalent requires considerably more as a user who wants to regularly move stablecoins into a yield-bearing position, or set up recurring purchases of an asset across any EVM-compatible network, needs to navigate the relevant protocol’s front-end, connect their wallet, handle any cross-chain bridging (if assets sit on a different network), and manage gas fees at the moment of each transaction.
Not only that, this chain of events needs to be repeated across interfaces that change frequently and occasionally go offline without notice.
There is also the monitoring burden that comes alongside any position held in DeFi, as a sudden market dislocation, like the conditions that drove over $1.7 billion in liquidations across Ethereum and EVM-compatible networks in October 2025, can unwind a position within hours.
For users executing DCA manually while also managing active positions, the response window is narrow, and the cognitive load is high.
In all of this, CoinFello has built a digital foundation that addresses such gaps without requiring users to work around DeFi’s UX limitations.
The platform connects to all EVM-compatible wallets, with users also able to create accounts via email or phone number, and provides a chat interface through which DCA instructions can be set in plain language.
A prompt like “buy $100 of ETH every week using my stablecoin balance” is treated as an instruction, with the agent identifying the correct on-chain execution path and presenting the full transaction breakdown to the user before anything touches their portfolio.
Critically, the DCA automation CoinFello currently offers does not require delegating open-ended wallet access, with users retaining full custody of their assets throughout the process, approving each execution in the sequence while maintaining visibility into exactly what is happening on-chain and why.
Lastly, the founder, Jacob Cantele, previously served as Lead of Operations at MetaMask with Consensys, and that background shows in the way CoinFello handles its control layer.
The future of digital financeDCA as a strategy has held up across decades of market cycles because the underlying logic is sound.
However, the gap that has persisted in DeFi is not that the strategy does not apply (because it clearly does, perhaps more than anywhere else) but that the infrastructure for executing it simply and without custody trade-offs has not kept pace.
And while that gap is starting to close, the tooling doing it is beginning to look a lot more like a conversation than a dashboard.
In any case, the future seems to be full of exciting developments.
The post Crypto has a dollar-cost averaging problem, and it has nothing to do with the strategy appeared first on CoinJournal.
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