April 19, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Trump’s Official Memecoin Surges Despite Massive $320 Million Unlock in Thin Holiday Trading Slovenia Moves to Tax Crypto Profits at 25% Unpacking the DOJ’s Crypto Enforcement Memo Canary Capital Files for Tron ETF With Staking Capabilities Feds Mistakenly Order Estonian HashFlare Fraudsters to Self-Deport Ahead of Sentencing CoinDesk Weekly Recap: EigenLayer, Kraken, Coinbase, AWS The Case for User-Owned AI Crypto Exchange Kraken Launches FX Perpetual Futures, Offers 24/7 Trading in Forex Majors Friends With Benefits Grows Up KiloEx’s ‘Sophisticated’ Hack Shows DeFi Risks — But This Time, Recovery Was Swift

Bitcoin’s True Capitulation Zone Is $65K, Says Well-Followed Analyst

Where’s the bottom for bitcoin (BTC)?

While acknowledging it’s possible that level has already been hit, on-chain analyst James Check suggested a true bottom may not be in place until after bitcoin suffers a true capitulation event.

That would likely require a decline to the $65,000 area, said Check, calling it the “true market mean,” i.e., the average cost basis for active investors.

At that point according to Check, who spoke on the TFTC podcast, the average investor may begin to feel the pressure of unrealized losses. Even long-term holders, including those who have held bitcoin for five years, could find themselves underwater. Interestingly, this price level aligns closely with Michael Saylor’s Strategy, which has a similar cost basis of around $67,500.

Where does capitulation take the market?

While Check expects sizable declines from the $65,000 area, he sees strong support in the $49,000-$50,000 range, those prices representing the launch of the ETFs in 2024 as well as a $1 trillion market cap for bitcoin. A drop to as low as $40,000 seems unlikely, he said, barring a global recession.

Check also took note of the extended period of “chopsolidation” in 2024 — where bitcoin traded for months in a wide range between $50K and $70K — as establishing a strong foundation of support.

This post was originally published on this site