The recent fall in Bitcoin (BTC) price below the psychological barrier of $60,000 triggered traditional alarm in the digital asset market, triggering a wave of bearish predictions that evoked the ghosts of past crises. But far from collapsing into thin air, major crypto assets appear to be seeking the technical support that financial analysis algorithms have long anticipated.
Already at a loss of more than 50% from the previous historical maximum, it takes a specialist company like Glassnode to understand where this correction stops. They scrutinize the behavior of long-term investors.
Analysts set a key containment zone around $54,000 using an indicator known as realized price, which calculates the average price at which a coin was last purchased on the blockchain. This is the digital equivalent of the cost of production in the economy. This is the threshold at which historical buyers typically refuse to sell at a loss.
Threshold at which panic over Bitcoin price stops
If this first line of defense collapses, the mathematical model activates a second historical buffer around $46,200 based on the cumulative value of the destroyed holding days.
This combination of indicators delimits zones with a high probability of a structural bottom. “The likely bottom zone is between $46,000 and $54,000,” says Glassnode co-founder Rafael, alluding to the geographic price space. Historically, retail panics here have been absorbed by huge accumulations of government debt.
The great paradox of this cycle is that despite the current tensions, hard data reflects unprecedented resistance. In previous bear markets, Bitcoin experienced dramatic declines of 77% to 85%, but the current decline is clearly more shallow. However, given the price levels reached, the decline looks even worse when measured in dollars. From an ATH of $126,000, the decline is more than $65,000.
Some analysts believe that historical levels These indicators served as lower bounds in previous cycles and he drawdown The current shallowness indicates a possible bottom at the top of the range. Some have warned that in a macro liquidity crisis or strong capitulation environment, prices could break through these supports and head toward lower levels.
The model provides a price range rather than a time frame, and lows typically include rapid declines. This debate pits on-chain analytics against broader macroeconomic conditions.
As reported by CriptoNoticias, Bitcoin is currently hovering around its 200-week moving average, which in past cycles has served as a support zone along with the median realized price during major corrections.
In any case, the market is entering a stage of technical attrition, and data models have already played their part by defining risk maps, but the time variable remains unresolved.
The focus now turns to investor patience. This is because the lower bound for Bitcoin prices likely does not depend on a mathematical formula, but rather on the speed at which long-term buyers decide to validate these prices against the traditional economic environment, which continues to exert pressure from outside.
(Tag translation) Analysis and research

