Bitcoin Crashes: Experts Warn Of 6-Month Slump To $73,000
February 25 2025 - 2:30AM
NEWSBTC
The Bitcoin price has fallen more than -8.8% since Friday when
Bybit suffered the biggest crypto hack in history. The flagship
digital asset reached a peak of $99,493 late last week, only to
retreat to roughly $91,500 at press time, marking a -5.5% decline
since Monday. This downturn not only shatters Bitcoin’s attempt to
hold above $95,000 but also places it on the verge of losing its
critical 97-day trading range between $91,000 and $102,000.
Notably, Bitcoin’s price has broken below the descending trend
channel that has been in play since January 20. What’s Next For
Bitcoin? Ari Paul, co-founder and Chief Investment Officer of
BlockTower Capital, offered a wide-ranging view on Bitcoin’s
trajectory and the broader macroeconomic environment. In a post on
X, Paul touched on the potential for continued equity-market
weakness and its knock-on effect on digital assets: “My market
take: equities in for 4-15 months of pain (I’ll guess 9 months)
tied to deflationary government policies (tariffs and mass layoffs
mostly). Then it’s a political question – does Trump admin
‘capitulate’ and turn severely inflationary? In vast majority of
similar cases in history the answer was yes, but just a low
confidence guess to me currently.” Related Reading: Is The Bitcoin
Price Manipulated? Expert Exposes The Truth Shifting focus to
crypto, Paul emphasized that while cryptocurrencies may still
display short-term correlations with equities, they are inherently
on different cyclical rhythms: “What does that mean for crypto? I
continue to think crypto and equities are on different cycles
rhythms, but that doesn’t negate shorter term correlation. Alts
probably follow equities down at least at first (but they’re
already down so much, even versus 2021 prices, they may bottom well
before equities.)” Speaking on Bitcoin, Paul predicts that the
leading cryptocurrency will “act like a blend of gold and S&P
500,” adding, “if gold remains strong, than that would suggest
Bitcoin would outperform losing equities, but maybe not by much. A
retrace to ~$73k-$77k seems plausible, I’d probably add there.”
Despite the near-term volatility, Paul remains optimistic: “I
remain confident crypto bull market not over, but this is looking
increasingly different from prior cycles, maybe substantially
slower and longer. My base case is that crypto will lead the
general macro inflation turn, so maybe crypto bull run resumes in 6
months and equities turn up in 9. The dates given are just
indications of my guesstimates. I place no weight on the exact
timeframes.” BitMEX founder Arthur Hayes also took to X to warn of
an imminent downward push. He pointed to the mechanics of Bitcoin
Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) and futures market arbitrage as
potential drivers of increased selling pressure. “Bitcoin goblin
town incoming: Lots of IBIT holders are hedge funds that went long
ETF short CME future to earn a yield greater than where they fund,
short term US treasuries. If that basis drops as BTC falls, then
these funds will sell IBIT and buy back CME futures. These funds
are in profit, and given basis is close to UST yields they will
unwind during US hours and realise their profit. $70,000 I see you
mofo,” he writes. Related Reading: Bitcoin Price Consolidates In
Tight Zone: Why A Crash To $84,000 Is Likely Notably, research firm
10x Research published an analysis on Monday indicating that while
Bitcoin ETFs—led by BlackRock’s IBIT product—have garnered $38.6
billion in net inflows since their January 2024 launch, much of
this capital may not represent straightforward bets on rising BTC
prices, aligning with Hayes’ statement. “Although Bitcoin ETFs have
attracted $38.6 billion in net inflows since their January 2024
launch, our analysis suggests that only $17.5 billion (44%)
represents genuine long-only buying. The majority—56%—is likely
tied to arbitrage strategies, where short Bitcoin futures positions
offset inflows,” the firm noted. Prior to the ongoing price drop,
market technician Tony “The Bull” Severino, warned of looming
volatility in Bitcoin, noting that the daily Bollinger Bands were
hitting extreme tightness—a pattern often followed by a significant
price swing: “A decision will be made soon in Bitcoin, as the daily
Bollinger Bands reach the third-tightest reading since 2018. In
late 2018, record tightness led to a 50% decline in just over a
month. In mid 2023, record tightness led to a 200% climb in just
over 200 days. Which direction does volatility release?” With
Bitcoin teetering just above $91,000 and the market still reeling
from Bybit’s historic hack, the market is at a pivotal juncture.
Chart signals, macroeconomic uncertainties, and the unwinding of
complex trading strategies collectively draw a clouded outlook with
a possible extension of this slump to the $73,000–$77,000 range in
the coming months. Meanwhile, this does not have to herald the
beginning of the bear market. Chris Burniske, partner at
Placeholder VC, commented via X: “In the middle of 2021:BTC drew
down 56%, ETH drew down 61%, SOL drew down 67%, many others
70-80%+. You can come up with all the reasons for why this cycle is
different, but the mid-bull reset we’re going through isn’t
unprecedented. Those calling for a full blown bear are misguided.”
At press time, BTC traded at $90,537. Featured image created with
DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com
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