Bitcoin has now declined roughly 37% from its all-time high, but historical drawdown data suggests the market may still be in the early stages of a broader contraction phase, rather than at a definitive cycle bottom.
According to long-term analysis from Alphractal, Bitcoin bottoms have historically formed only after significantly deeper drawdowns, even as the market has matured over time.
Alphractal’s full-cycle drawdown model highlights a consistent pattern across Bitcoin’s major bear markets:
In every case, the final bottom emerged well after the initial breakdown, following a prolonged period of capitulation, forced selling, and liquidity compression.
By comparison, the current −37% drawdown remains materially above historical bottom levels, placing Bitcoin closer to early contraction than terminal exhaustion.
Based on Alphractal’s long-term dataset, the most probable zone for a cycle bottom lies between:
−60% and −70% from the all-time high
This range has consistently marked the point where:
Historically, this zone has coincided with the transition from capitulation into accumulation, rather than the start of a new downtrend.
Bitcoin’s drawdowns have become less severe over successive cycles, reflecting improved liquidity, institutional participation, and broader adoption. However, Alphractal’s data shows that depth has moderated, but the contraction phase has never disappeared.
Even in the most recent cycle, Bitcoin still required a −75% drawdown before forming a durable bottom. A −37% decline has never, on its own, completed a full bearish reset.
The present correction follows:
These conditions align more closely with mid-cycle contraction behavior than with historical bottom formation.
Based strictly on Alphractal’s historical drawdown framework:
This does not imply inevitability, but history shows that true Bitcoin bottoms form after exhaustion, not after the first wave of fear.
Until drawdowns approach historical bottom ranges and selling pressure structurally dissipates, the market remains vulnerable to further downside before a sustainable recovery can take hold.
The post Here Is Where Bitcoin’s Cycle Bottom Could Be appeared first on ETHNews.

