Bitcoin (BTC) has reached highs of $60,000, but calculations suggest that this price level will be more important to bears than bulls.
In a tweet on Oct. 14, popular Twitter account TechDev re-emphasized historical data that has accurately tracked Bitcoin’s highs and lows so far.
How about an 80% Bitcoin price crash? $60,000?
While BTC/USD is expected to recapture all-time highs and climb into six figures this year, investor attention has turned to how far Bitcoin will fall after its next peak.
It is widely accepted that Bitcoin’s price action is cyclical — there is a bearish phase with a bottom being an 80% drop from the peak.
However, under the current circumstances, it is even harder to believe that $60,000 may be the price floor for a potential 80% retracement.
Via the Fibonacci sequence, TechDev proved that every Bitcoin bottomed in the same range. This is why the price of Bitcoin fell below the low of $200 in 2014 and the bottom of around $3,200 in December 2018.
Given Bitcoin's cyclical nature, a reasonable target for the next pullback would be between $47,000 and $60,000.
“I know no one looks at the macro situation during a decline. But the past two BTC bear markets have bottomed out at 1.486-1.618 log fib (Fibonacci) in the previous cycle,” he commented.
“Suggests that the next bear market bottom is $47-60k. If that’s where we bottom after a 80-85% drop...the math gets interesting.”
$60,000 as the top 20% makes it possible for Bitcoin to test $300,000 during this period.
bears a striking resemblance to gold
The momentum behind bitcoin has been tied to expectations that U.S. regulators will eventually approve some form of bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF).
Commentators say that while opinions vary on the impact of the decision, its significance is not a red herring but marks a true watershed moment of irreversibility for bitcoin.
Austrian investor and analyst Niko Jilch mentioned prominent investor Paul Tudor Jones this week when explaining the “excitement” over a bitcoin ETF.
Tudor Jones has previously highlighted that Bitcoin cycles are similar to gold in the 1970s - when gold itself became a futures product and enjoyed a ten-year bull market followed by a 50% correction.
TechDev also pointed out that gold's performance in the 1970s closely matches Bitcoin's performance since October 2020.
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