The selling pressure on Bitcoin may be weakening, thanks to stabilizing momentum, miners beginning to capitulate, and liquidity conditions shifting to support. Based on a comprehensive analysis of multiple technical and on-chain indicators, Bitcoin may be forming a local bottom after its price retraced over 35% from the approximately $126,200 all-time high set two months ago. Key points: Momentum, miner capitulation, and liquidity indicators all point to diminishing selling pressure. Macro liquidity data suggests BTC could start to recover within the next four to six weeks. Bitcoin's selling power is nearing exhaustion. As of December, the weekly stochastic RSI has begun to rise from oversold levels. Trader Jesse pointed out that this pattern has historically appeared near key turning points, often followed by a rebound. Similar bullish crossover patterns occurred in early 2019 (after BTC bottomed near $3,200), March 2020 (around $3,800 during the COVID crisis low), and late 2022 (around $15,500 during the cycle low). In each case, technical momentum shifted first, with prices lagging behind. Additionally, Bitcoin's three-day chart is forming a bullish divergence, with prices making lower lows but momentum indicators not following suit. This pattern has also appeared before mid-2021 correction lows and prior to the bottom caused by the 2022 FTX crisis, both of which preceded market rebounds in the following months. These signals collectively suggest that Bitcoin's selling pressure may be exhausted in the near term, a scenario more typical of market bottoms rather than short-term technical rebounds. Bitcoin Miner Capitulation Indicates BTC Has Bottomed VanEck analysts Matt Sigel and Patrick Bush stated that within a month ending December 15, Bitcoin's hash rate declined by 4%, viewing this as "a bullish contrarian signal" closely related to miner capitulation. These analysts noted that historical data shows sustained hash rate compression often predicts strong subsequent performance for Bitcoin. Since 2014, after a 30-day hash rate decline, BTC experienced positive 90-day returns in 65% of cases. This signal is even more robust over longer periods, with 77% of 180-day returns being positive and an average gain of 72%. Price increases could also improve miner profitability and incentivize previously idle mining capacity to come back online. Bitcoin could see a rebound within 4-6 weeks, as a macro indicator suggests it is approaching a bottom, with liquidity conditions beginning to improve—a factor historically associated with major Bitcoin reversals. Analyst Miad Kasravi's backtest of 105 indicators shows that the peak of the National Financial Conditions Index (NFCI) typically leads Bitcoin rebounds by 4 to 6 weeks. This signal appeared at the end of 2022 and mid-2024, both before sharp Bitcoin rallies. Historically, every 0.10 point decline in NFCI has been associated with a roughly 15%-20% increase in Bitcoin price, with lower NFCI readings indicating a long-term bullish phase for Bitcoin. As of December, the NFCI stands at -0.52 and continues to trend downward. A potential catalyst is the Federal Reserve's plan to convert mortgage-backed securities into Treasury bonds, Kasravi pointed out. This move is similar to the 2019 "non-QE" liquidity injection, which triggered a 40% rally in Bitcoin.
Despite these positive signals, many market analysts expect Bitcoin prices could still decline further, with price targets in the $70,000 range.
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#2025Gate年度账单 #加密市场小幅回暖 Three Major Signs Indicate Bitcoin (BTC) Is Bottoming Out
The selling pressure on Bitcoin may be weakening, thanks to stabilizing momentum, miners beginning to capitulate, and liquidity conditions shifting to support. Based on a comprehensive analysis of multiple technical and on-chain indicators, Bitcoin may be forming a local bottom after its price retraced over 35% from the approximately $126,200 all-time high set two months ago.
Key points: Momentum, miner capitulation, and liquidity indicators all point to diminishing selling pressure.
Macro liquidity data suggests BTC could start to recover within the next four to six weeks. Bitcoin's selling power is nearing exhaustion. As of December, the weekly stochastic RSI has begun to rise from oversold levels. Trader Jesse pointed out that this pattern has historically appeared near key turning points, often followed by a rebound. Similar bullish crossover patterns occurred in early 2019 (after BTC bottomed near $3,200), March 2020 (around $3,800 during the COVID crisis low), and late 2022 (around $15,500 during the cycle low). In each case, technical momentum shifted first, with prices lagging behind.
Additionally, Bitcoin's three-day chart is forming a bullish divergence, with prices making lower lows but momentum indicators not following suit. This pattern has also appeared before mid-2021 correction lows and prior to the bottom caused by the 2022 FTX crisis, both of which preceded market rebounds in the following months. These signals collectively suggest that Bitcoin's selling pressure may be exhausted in the near term, a scenario more typical of market bottoms rather than short-term technical rebounds.
Bitcoin Miner Capitulation Indicates BTC Has Bottomed
VanEck analysts Matt Sigel and Patrick Bush stated that within a month ending December 15, Bitcoin's hash rate declined by 4%, viewing this as "a bullish contrarian signal" closely related to miner capitulation. These analysts noted that historical data shows sustained hash rate compression often predicts strong subsequent performance for Bitcoin. Since 2014, after a 30-day hash rate decline, BTC experienced positive 90-day returns in 65% of cases. This signal is even more robust over longer periods, with 77% of 180-day returns being positive and an average gain of 72%. Price increases could also improve miner profitability and incentivize previously idle mining capacity to come back online. Bitcoin could see a rebound within 4-6 weeks, as a macro indicator suggests it is approaching a bottom, with liquidity conditions beginning to improve—a factor historically associated with major Bitcoin reversals.
Analyst Miad Kasravi's backtest of 105 indicators shows that the peak of the National Financial Conditions Index (NFCI) typically leads Bitcoin rebounds by 4 to 6 weeks. This signal appeared at the end of 2022 and mid-2024, both before sharp Bitcoin rallies. Historically, every 0.10 point decline in NFCI has been associated with a roughly 15%-20% increase in Bitcoin price, with lower NFCI readings indicating a long-term bullish phase for Bitcoin. As of December, the NFCI stands at -0.52 and continues to trend downward.
A potential catalyst is the Federal Reserve's plan to convert mortgage-backed securities into Treasury bonds, Kasravi pointed out. This move is similar to the 2019 "non-QE" liquidity injection, which triggered a 40% rally in Bitcoin.
Despite these positive signals, many market analysts expect Bitcoin prices could still decline further, with price targets in the $70,000 range.