Bitcoin’s death cross confirmation may mean BTC is officially in a bear market


A rare death cross has been confirmed on Bitcoin’s price chart, suggesting that the bear market has just started. Will dip buyers be able to defy the trend?

COINTELEGRAPH IN YOUR SOCIAL FEED

Key takeaways:

  • Bitcoin’s death cross, which previously led to 64%-77% BTC price declines, has flashed again.

  • Mounting selling pressure is prompting many investors to sell their BTC holdings at a loss. 

Bitcoin (BTC) may have confirmed its entry into a bear market after the price dropped to $80,000 on Friday. This view is reinforced by a convergence of technical indicators that have historically preceded extended declines. 

Bitcoin’s macro uptrend was invalidated

The BTC/USD pair closed below its 50-week moving average on Sunday, a level crypto analyst Rekt Capital has been closely watching, saying that the “price will need to reclaim it promptly on a relief rally to protect the structure.”

“Bitcoin wasn’t able to reclaim the 50-week EMA,” the analyst wrote in a Friday post on X, adding:

“Bullish market structures are invalidated when the macro trend shifts.”

Rekt Capital was referring to Bitcoin’s drop below key support lines, even as the price slid below the 100-week moving average to reach a six-month low of $80,500 on Friday. 

Related: Bitcoin slump to $86K brings BTC closer to ‘max pain’ but great ‘discount’ zone

Meanwhile, the price confirmed a “death cross” on its daily chart at the end of last week, a technical pattern that has previously preceded significant price declines.

On Sunday, Bitcoin’s 50-day simple moving average (SMA) crossed below its 200-day SMA for the first time since January 2024, forming a death cross.

“Every Bitcoin cycle has ended with a Death Cross,” said analyst Mister Crypto in an X analysis on Monday, asking:

“Why would this time be different?”

Bitcoin’s past performance after a death cross. Source: Mister Crypto

In January 2022, the death cross was followed by a 64% BTC price drop, bottoming at $15,500, fueled by the FTX collapse

March 2018 and September 2014 saw 67% and 71% declines in BTC price, respectively, after painting similar SMA crossovers.

As Cointelegraph reported, Bitcoin’s SuperTrend indicator also sent a bearish signal on the weekly chart, an occurrence that has historically marked the start of a bear market. 

Bitcoin realized losses surpassed $800 million

With selling pressure increasing by the hour, the volume of realized losses has risen to levels not seen since the 2022 FTX collapse. 

Onchain data provider Glassnode shared a chart showing that Bitcoin’s aggregate realized losses by both short-term and long-term holders have surged to areas above $800 million on a seven-day rolling basis. The $800 million mark was last crossed in November 2022. 

“Short-term holders are driving the bulk of the capitulation,” Glassnode said, adding:

“The scale and speed of these losses reflect a meaningful washout of marginal demand as recent buyers unwind into the drawdown.”

Bitcoin realized loss. Source: Glassnode

Sharing a similar perspective, CryptoQuant analyst IT Tech said short-term selling “often marks a local bottom if the price quickly reclaims the cost basis,” adding:

“Failing to do so historically indicates a deeper bearish trend or confirms a bear market.” 

Bitcoin STH realized profit and loss. Source: CryptoQuant

As Cointelegraph reported, short-term holders have been panic-selling their Bitcoin holdings at a loss, adding fuel to analysts’ predictions that the BTC price will extend its downtrend toward its April bottom of $74,500.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

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Author: Nancy Lubale

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