$BTC Bitcoin has fallen nearly 30% from its October peak of $126,000, losing over $600 billion in market capitalization and reaching a seven-month low.
Four AI models assess the likelihood of Bitcoin falling to $50,000 at only 5-15%, with most forecasts predicting stabilization between $70,000 and $110,000. Historical patterns show that Bitcoin typically loses more than 50% during crashes, but institutional adoption of ETFs provides new support mechanisms that were absent in previous cycles. The critical support zone of $85,000-$90,000 will determine whether this is a short-term correction or the beginning of a prolonged crypto winter. Investors should use dollar-cost averaging and limit Bitcoin to 5-10% of their portfolios to manage volatility, rather than making emotional decisions during price swings. Bitcoin now behaves like a macroeconomic asset, responding to the policies of the Federal Reserve and liquidity conditions, rather than acting independently of traditional markets.
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$BTC Bitcoin has fallen nearly 30% from its October peak of $126,000, losing over $600 billion in market capitalization and reaching a seven-month low.
Four AI models assess the likelihood of Bitcoin falling to $50,000 at only 5-15%, with most forecasts predicting stabilization between $70,000 and $110,000.
Historical patterns show that Bitcoin typically loses more than 50% during crashes, but institutional adoption of ETFs provides new support mechanisms that were absent in previous cycles.
The critical support zone of $85,000-$90,000 will determine whether this is a short-term correction or the beginning of a prolonged crypto winter.
Investors should use dollar-cost averaging and limit Bitcoin to 5-10% of their portfolios to manage volatility, rather than making emotional decisions during price swings.
Bitcoin now behaves like a macroeconomic asset, responding to the policies of the Federal Reserve and liquidity conditions, rather than acting independently of traditional markets.