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Is Bitcoin Bottoming or About to Crash?
The Bitcoin (BTC) price action triggered a Death Cross on Sunday, November 16, after its 50-day moving average dipped below the 200-day moving average.
Historically considered a bearish technical signal, the event has sparked fresh debate among traders and analysts. The key question: does this mark a local bottom, or is a further drop looming?
In technical analysis, a Death Cross occurs when short-term price momentum falls below long-term trends, signaling potential downward pressure. As of this writing, Bitcoin trades around $93,646, after slipping below the $94,000 threshold for the first time since May 5.
Market sentiment is extremely bearish, with the Fear & Greed Index plunging to 10, indicating extreme fear. Meanwhile, whale selling and spot ETF outflows have accelerated recent downward moves.
Amidst these negative sentiments and fear of further downside, analysts say that a Death Cross does not automatically predict crashes.
Historical data from 2014 to 2025 shows mixed short-term outcomes but strong medium- to long-term rebounds in many cycles.
Data shared by Mario Nawfal and on-chain analysts indicates:
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1–3 weeks post-cross: Returns are nearly 50/50 between gains and losses; median returns slightly positive (~0.25–2.35%).
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2–3 months post-cross: Average gains jump to 15–26%, suggesting a potential recovery if historical patterns hold.
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12 months later: Outcomes vary widely; some cycles delivered 85%+ gains, others experienced severe drawdowns, depending on the macro context.
Benjamin Cowen and Rekt Fencer argue that previous Death Crosses have often marked local lows, rather than market tops. The timing of the next bounce could be critical. If BTC does not rally within 7 days, analysts warn another leg down could precede a larger recovery.
Technical and macro indicators highlight crucial thresholds:
