Bitcoin Has Not Been Above $100,000 for Five Months and the Setup for Re-Entry Has Rarely Been Cleaner
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Bitcoin last traded above $100,000 on November 13, following a $19 billion market liquidation event in October that many analysts credit with triggering the five-month downtrend. From that point, Bitcoin fell to a yearly low of $60,000 in February before recovering to approximately $78,250 at the time of writing. That 30% recovery from the low has happened quietly, without a dominant narrative, without a major regulatory catalyst, and without the kind of retail frenzy that characterized the $126,000 all-time high last October. For investors who understand market cycles, that combination of recovering price and absent retail enthusiasm is historically one of the better environments in which to build a position.
The asymmetric opportunity case rests on several overlapping factors. Bitcoin needs to move approximately 28% from current levels to reclaim $100,000, a level that institutional buyers like Strategy, ETF flows, and long-term holders are all accumulating toward according to on-chain data. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index has recovered from an extreme fear reading of 10 in early April to the mid-40s, meaning sentiment has improved meaningfully but has not yet reached the greed territory where risk-reward for new entries historically compresses. Peter Brandt has noted that regulatory developments like the CLARITY Act, while positive, are unlikely to be price-moving catalysts on their own, meaning any legislative progress would be incremental upside rather than the primary driver. The primary driver, van de Poppe argues, is simply math, statistics, and logic applied to current price levels, and by those measures Bitcoin between $75,000 and $80,000 remains a statistically justified accumulation zone for investors willing to hold through the volatility required to reach the next all-time high.