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Bitcoin has a line in the sand that has saved every bull market since 2015

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A chart showing the bitcoin price's Ichimoku Cloud and 200-week moving average.

Bitcoin’s 11% slide last week may be the least of investors’ concerns. It’s a price of around $58,000, another 25% below current levels, they should be paying attention to.

While the largest cryptocurrency’s recent crash, the biggest weekly drop since March 2025, and inability to attract buyers has many holders worried about another so-called crypto winter, there’s still a painful journey before it reaches the possible silver lining that is the 200-week moving average (WMA).

The mean closing price of BTC over the past 200 weeks is a widely used long-term momentum indicator and a baseline for the traditional-four year bitcoin cycle. It has marked a market bottom in every previous cycle, and is currently at $57,926.

Historically, bitcoin has often peaked in the fourth quarter of the fourth cycle year. This time round, it reached an all-time high of $126,000 in October and is currently down around 40% from that peak.

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A further slide may be on the cards.

Last week’s drop took bitcoin below the Ichimoku Cloud, a technical indicator that gauges momentum, support and resistance. When the price holds above the cloud, that indicates a robust bullish trend, with strong upward momentum. When price falls below it, the market turns anemic, lacking strength and exposed to extended weakness, like a human body that’s short of iron.

Bitcoin just crossed below the cloud on the weekly chart, a bearish shift that’s historically signaled the start of the deepest and most painful bear-market phases.

A chart showing the bitcoin price's Ichimoku Cloud and 200-week moving average.

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It also appears to be broadly tracking the four-year cycle theory, driven by the halving schedule that cuts new supply by 50% roughly every four years and is partially the reason for the cyclical bull and bear markets.

In the 2015 bear market, bitcoin traded slightly above $200 and consistently used the 200-WMA as support. During the 2018-2019 bear market, the 200-WMA sat just above $3,000 and again acted as support, with a brief breakdown during the Covid-driven market crash in March 2020.

In the previous cycle, bitcoin fell below the 200-WMA in June 2022, to levels below $22,000, and remained there for an extended period. The price did not reclaim the 200-WMA line until October 2023, confirming its role as a long-term trend support line.

While there’s no guarantee, the recent price drop below the Ichimoku Cloud indicates another sustained bear-market phase may be imminent, but at least there’s a time-proven support level to provide some cheer.

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Crypto World

US Senator Hagerty Confirms April Timeline for Crypto Market Structure

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Cryptocurrencies, Law, Politics, Congress

US Senate Banking Committee member Bill Hagerty said Monday that he expects a potential path for a digital asset market structure in the coming weeks after months of delays in Congress.

Speaking at the Digital Assets and Emerging Tech Policy Summit at Vanderbilt University, he said his fellow Republican lawmakers planned to move the bill through the banking panel starting next week.

“We will be in a position, I hope, to bring all of this together very soon,” said Hagerty, referring to work on the bill in the Senate. “On the banking committee side, I think we’re very close, and my expectation is that we get it into committee in this next work period that starts on Monday of next week, so that over the next several weeks we should have this into the banking committee.”

The Tennessee senator added:

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“There’re several issues still outstanding, I think none of them are insurmountable and we will get to a point I believe in April that we’ll have it out of the banking committee. There’s still a lot more work to do.”

Cryptocurrencies, Law, Politics, Congress
US Senator Bill Hagerty at the April 6 Digital Assets and Emerging Tech Policy Summit. Source: Blockchain Association

Originally titled the CLARITY Act when it passed the House of Representatives in July, the bill is considered by many lawmakers and industry leaders to be one of the most significant pieces of crypto legislation, but it has faced delays in Congress amid government shutdowns, industry pushback on stablecoin yield and ethics concerns.

It is expected to provide a comprehensive framework for cryptocurrencies in the US, including largely changing oversight of the market from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). 

Because both agencies are involved, the legislation would need approval from the committee responsible for commodities — Senate Agriculture — and that for securities, the banking committee. The agriculture committee advanced its version of the crypto bill in a January markup, but concerns over tokenized equities, ethics, and stablecoin yield have delayed consideration in the banking committee, which needs to hold a markup before a potential floor vote in the Senate.

Related: CFTC chair says agency is ready to oversee entire crypto market

“We’re going into the midterms,” said Hagerty. “I think if we get this done in April, we can clearly get this taken care of before the midterms.”

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Limited window for market structure as crypto potentially influences US elections again

Hagerty’s comments echoed those of Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal, who said last week that lawmakers were “close to a deal” on stablecoin yield and other issues in the market structure bill.

According to the Coinbase-backed advocacy group Stand With Crypto, the way lawmakers vote on the legislation could impact their chances for the 2026 midterms, setting the stage for crypto interest groups to potentially influence another major US election.

The crypto-backed political action committee (PAC) Fairshake, which reported spending more than $130 million on media buys in the 2024 elections, said in January that it had a $193-million war chest ahead of the November 2026 midterms.

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The group is not alone in its support for crypto on the national stage. The Fellowship PAC, which claimed to have raised “over $100 million” from undisclosed backers aligned with the crypto industry, announced the appointment of Tether executive Jesse Spiro as chair on Wednesday.

Magazine: Clarity Act risks repeat of Europe’s mistakes, crypto lawyer warns