The post It’s foolish to pretend Bitcoin’s story doesn’t include $79k this year appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin is slipping again, and the mood across the market is shifting. Traders who were celebrating six-figure prices only weeks ago are suddenly watching key levels evaporate. The move below $106,400 was the first real warning sign, the collapse through $99,000 confirmed that the market is no longer treating those supports as serious areas of interest. Now the charts are pointing toward the lower boundaries of the same ETF-era channels that have guided Bitcoin’s entire structure since January 2024. I have been tracking these horizontal channels since the day the ETFs launched. They have acted as remarkably accurate markers of support and resistance, a kind of real-time heat map of where liquidity is concentrated. Bitcoin price channels (Source: TradingView) Each colored band represents a price range where Bitcoin spent time consolidating, indicating that leverage built up there and market participants anchored their decisions to those levels. Breaking through a channel requires meaningful pressure, whether it is buyers overwhelming sellers or the opposite. That pressure is clearly coming from the sell side now. A Strange Cycle From the Beginning This cycle never fit the usual template. Historically, Bitcoin has never reached a new all-time high so close to an upcoming halving. Yet in early 2024, Bitcoin broke the old $69,000 high months before the halving even arrived. It was the earliest breakout in Bitcoin’s history, setting the tone for the year. Bitcoin halving channels (Source: TradingView) By the time we reached October this year, the price had surged to $126,000. Based on previous cycle timing and the behavior around halving dates, I called that the top. If that call was correct, we are now in the first chapters of the bear market. Cycle timing usually explains these transitions, although the ETF era complicates things. Issuance is still declining, but the dominant… The post It’s foolish to pretend Bitcoin’s story doesn’t include $79k this year appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin is slipping again, and the mood across the market is shifting. Traders who were celebrating six-figure prices only weeks ago are suddenly watching key levels evaporate. The move below $106,400 was the first real warning sign, the collapse through $99,000 confirmed that the market is no longer treating those supports as serious areas of interest. Now the charts are pointing toward the lower boundaries of the same ETF-era channels that have guided Bitcoin’s entire structure since January 2024. I have been tracking these horizontal channels since the day the ETFs launched. They have acted as remarkably accurate markers of support and resistance, a kind of real-time heat map of where liquidity is concentrated. Bitcoin price channels (Source: TradingView) Each colored band represents a price range where Bitcoin spent time consolidating, indicating that leverage built up there and market participants anchored their decisions to those levels. Breaking through a channel requires meaningful pressure, whether it is buyers overwhelming sellers or the opposite. That pressure is clearly coming from the sell side now. A Strange Cycle From the Beginning This cycle never fit the usual template. Historically, Bitcoin has never reached a new all-time high so close to an upcoming halving. Yet in early 2024, Bitcoin broke the old $69,000 high months before the halving even arrived. It was the earliest breakout in Bitcoin’s history, setting the tone for the year. Bitcoin halving channels (Source: TradingView) By the time we reached October this year, the price had surged to $126,000. Based on previous cycle timing and the behavior around halving dates, I called that the top. If that call was correct, we are now in the first chapters of the bear market. Cycle timing usually explains these transitions, although the ETF era complicates things. Issuance is still declining, but the dominant…

It’s foolish to pretend Bitcoin’s story doesn’t include $79k this year

2025/11/15 11:02

Bitcoin is slipping again, and the mood across the market is shifting. Traders who were celebrating six-figure prices only weeks ago are suddenly watching key levels evaporate.

The move below $106,400 was the first real warning sign, the collapse through $99,000 confirmed that the market is no longer treating those supports as serious areas of interest.

Now the charts are pointing toward the lower boundaries of the same ETF-era channels that have guided Bitcoin’s entire structure since January 2024.

I have been tracking these horizontal channels since the day the ETFs launched. They have acted as remarkably accurate markers of support and resistance, a kind of real-time heat map of where liquidity is concentrated.

Bitcoin price channels (Source: TradingView)

Each colored band represents a price range where Bitcoin spent time consolidating, indicating that leverage built up there and market participants anchored their decisions to those levels. Breaking through a channel requires meaningful pressure, whether it is buyers overwhelming sellers or the opposite.

That pressure is clearly coming from the sell side now.

A Strange Cycle From the Beginning

This cycle never fit the usual template. Historically, Bitcoin has never reached a new all-time high so close to an upcoming halving.

Yet in early 2024, Bitcoin broke the old $69,000 high months before the halving even arrived. It was the earliest breakout in Bitcoin’s history, setting the tone for the year.

Bitcoin halving channels (Source: TradingView)

By the time we reached October this year, the price had surged to $126,000. Based on previous cycle timing and the behavior around halving dates, I called that the top.

If that call was correct, we are now in the first chapters of the bear market.

Cycle timing usually explains these transitions, although the ETF era complicates things. Issuance is still declining, but the dominant force now appears to be liquidity.

When billions of dollars can enter or leave the market in a single day through regulated vehicles, the market reacts very differently to the old retail-driven structure.

Even with those changes, the channels drawn from ETF-era price behavior have held up with surprising consistency.

The Breakdown, Level by Level

Bitcoin has now fallen through two of the most important bands. The $106,400 support level had acted as an upper spine for months, and the $99,000 level was built through heavy trading activity during June.

Losing both of those zones in one extended move shows how quickly institutional liquidity can be pulled. Buyers who defended these areas earlier in the year are no longer stepping in.

Right now, the price is drifting toward the bottom of the orange channel, which sits around $93,000. This region had solid engagement earlier in the trend, so it has a chance of slowing the decline, although it is not a guaranteed bounce zone.

Bitcoin price decline (Source: TradingView)

If that fails, the next major region is the purple channel. Its lower bound sits around $85,000.

What concerns me here is the lack of previous price action. Bitcoin moved through this band quickly the last time it passed through, which means the market never had time to build strong positioning there.

Channels with little historical consolidation often offer weak support because there is not much leverage anchored to those levels. Either the top of the purple channel becomes a point where buyers draw a line, or price slips directly through it, which would open the path toward the green channel.

The green band sits around $79,000 at its bottom, and this is a more substantial region. Bitcoin spent time consolidating in this zone during earlier legs of the cycle, so if we reach it, reactions should be stronger.

It would not be surprising to see buyers re-emerge here, especially if sentiment stabilizes around the idea that sub-$80,000 prices are an opportunity.

Below that, we get into the deep structural supports, the red and blue channels that formed through months of trading in 2024. These represent $49,000 to $56,000, an area that Bitcoin defended repeatedly before the run toward six figures began.

Hitting those levels this year would be an extremely heavy correction and more in line with a classic cycle bottom, which usually falls deeper into the multi-year pattern, typically around 2026 or 2027.

The Liquidity Problem

There is no escaping the importance of liquidity here. The second-largest ETF outflow on record hit the market yesterday.

Risk appetite is fading, and the institutions that helped push Bitcoin to new highs appear to be reducing exposure. In that kind of environment, reclaiming and holding $100,000 becomes difficult.

If the outflows continue, there is a realistic chance that Bitcoin keeps moving through the lower channels I have outlined. This does not require a collapse in fundamentals.

It only requires persistent risk-off sentiment and a steady shift toward cash and short-duration assets. When liquidity dries up, Bitcoin trades like a levered proxy for macro conditions.

So How Low Can It Go?

Based on the channel structure and the current flow environment:

  • $93,000 is the next logical test.
  • $85,000 comes into play if orange support fails.
  • $79,000 is the most realistic deeper target and a level that could hold even in a strong correction.
  • $49,000 to $56,000 sits far below as the ultimate cycle support, more likely a 2026–27 story unless liquidity deteriorates dramatically.

It is tempting to think that six figures is now the baseline for Bitcoin and that any drop into the eighties or seventies would be irrational. The structure says otherwise.

The ETF era created clear regions of support and resistance, and Bitcoin is now falling through them in the same way it rose through them on the way up. Until liquidity turns, the lower channels remain in play.

Source: https://cryptoslate.com/the-hubris-in-pretending-bitcoins-story-doesnt-include-79k-this-year/

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