The 2024 Bitcoin bull cycle never went parabolic. Analyst Michaël van de Poppe argues that missing ingredient is exactly why the current downturn may be shallower than anything seen in 2018 or 2022.
The Alphractal chart tracks how many days Bitcoin holders have spent at a loss, plotted against price on a logarithmic scale from 2011 through early 2026. The coloured bars represent loss periods, moving from purple at the base through blue, green, yellow, orange, and red at the peaks. Taller and redder means more holders were underwater for longer.
Three major spikes dominate the history. The 2015 bottom, the 2018 crash, and the 2022 collapse each produced towering red and orange bars. Pink arrows mark all three. The 2018 spike is the tallest on the entire chart, reflecting just how many people bought near the $19,783 peak and held through the devastation that followed.
The current reading sits at the far right, circled. Small bars. Mostly blue and purple. Nothing approaching red.
Van de Poppe posted the chart on March 8, 2026, with a simple observation. The 2024 cycle was shallow. It never produced the vertical parabolic structure that historically precedes deep, prolonged bear markets.
The mechanism behind that matters. Prior severe bear markets came after explosive price surges that pulled enormous amounts of late-cycle retail buying at peak prices. When those cycles reversed, millions of holders found themselves deeply underwater for months or years. That sustained pain is what generates the tall red spikes on the chart.
This cycle peaked around $126,000 in October 2025 but did so without the same blowoff structure. Fewer holders bought at the extreme. The loss day metric reflects that directly. A shallower bull run means a smaller pool of trapped buyers on the way down, which limits the structural selling pressure that makes bear markets truly brutal.
Van de Poppe adds a second layer to the argument. Multiple on-chain indicators are currently sitting at floor levels, the kinds of readings historically associated with cycle bottoms rather than mid-bear deterioration. That combination, a shallow bull run and floored indicators, leads him to expect markets to turn bullish within the next 12 to 24 months.
He is not calling an immediate bottom. He is arguing the conditions for a deep, extended bear market simply have not been set up the way they were in prior cycles.
The chart supports the relative comparison. Prior cycles left far more holders underwater for far longer. This one has not replicated that pattern. Whether that means the worst is already behind Bitcoin or that the full damage has not yet developed is what the coming months will settle.
The post Here Is Why This Bitcoin Bear Market Might Be Less Dangerous Than the Last One appeared first on ETHNews.


