Crypto World
Trader Forecasts Bitcoin Bear Market Bottom as 2-Month RSI Hits 0
Bitcoin’s path out of its current bear-market phase is once again being framed by a familiar set of momentum signals: stochastic RSI “bottoming” behavior that traders say has appeared at major turnarounds in past cycles. This time, the focus is on a two-month stochastic RSI indicator reaching (or revisiting) zero—an event one analyst argues has repeatedly marked the end of drawdowns.
Separately, other market participants are pointing to RSI divergences and extreme oversold readings earlier this year, suggesting the market may already be transitioning. However, as always with oscillator-based forecasts, the key question for traders is whether these signals play out with the same consistency as in earlier bear markets.
Key takeaways
- Trader Max Crypto argues that a two-month stochastic RSI “drop to 0” has historically lined up with BTC bear-market bottoms in 2014, 2018, and 2022.
- The same analyst says the bear market is likely over once two-month stoch RSI reaches zero again.
- TradingView data indicates two-month stochastic RSI has recently fallen into sub-30 “oversold” territory, with the current reading cited as 4.81.
- Other traders have highlighted RSI-related setups, including notes that extreme daily RSI readings have previously failed to break lower before rebounds.
- BTC’s move back above $64,000 this month is being linked—by market commentators—to bullish RSI divergences across time frames.
Why two-month stochastic RSI has become the latest “cycle” checklist
In an X post over the weekend, trader Max Crypto made a specific forecast for the end of the 2026 bear market based on stochastic relative strength index (stoch RSI). The core idea is tied to the behavior of a two-month stochastic RSI reading when it hits a new swing low and later crosses in a bullish direction.
Stoch RSI is built from RSI, but it tends to react more directly to recent momentum shifts. In Max Crypto’s view, that responsiveness is exactly why the indicator has served as an effective timing tool when markets have approached major bottoms.
“Every time the 2M Stoch RSI had a bullish cross and dropped to 0, $BTC bottomed,” Max Crypto wrote, adding that this pattern occurred in 2014, 2018, and 2022—and, in his words, “will happen again.”
What matters for readers is the conditional nature of the signal: the claim is not that stochastic RSI alone automatically predicts a bottom, but that the combination of a bullish cross and a subsequent drop to zero has marked turning points in earlier bear-market periods.
Where the indicator stands now: oversold, but not at zero
TradingView data referenced in the article shows that two-month stoch RSI has been sliding into the sub-30 “oversold” zone during March, with a current value of 4.81. The same reference notes that the levels seen recently were last observed just over three years ago—an observation meant to highlight rarity and potential importance rather than to guarantee an outcome.
In other words, the indicator appears to be near where market participants previously became attentive to “bottoming” behavior, but it has not yet reached the specific trigger point Max Crypto associates with bear-market completion.
As a result, traders watching this setup are likely to interpret any further decline toward zero as progress toward the forecast timeline, while a rebound before reaching zero could either reflect an early bottom or invalidate the clean version of the pattern.
RSI divergences and extreme oversold readings add a second layer of timing
Beyond stochastic RSI, the article also points to other RSI-focused analysis that has circulated among traders. The recurring theme is divergence—when price action and oscillator behavior fail to align in the expected bearish way—alongside signals of unusually weak momentum earlier in the year.
One example cited is a trader and investor account (“BitcoinHyper”) highlighting a bullish divergence setup against the S&P 500. While the exact decision framework is not detailed in the provided text, the implication is that correlation-linked weakness may have been less damaging than it looked on price alone.
Another thread comes from trader Osemka, who discussed an especially low daily RSI reading. According to the article, at the start of June daily RSI dropped to around 15—an extreme oversold level that Osemka later described as one of a small set of “extremely powerful selling events.” Osemka’s key point was that there has been at least one case where an RSI oversold extreme did not break lower; instead, price swept the low and then turned.
Osemka connected this idea to historical behavior, noting that such an outcome occurred at the end of an accumulation range in 2015. He then suggested that the present situation is similar in the sense that the market has “only swept the low” on a comparable powerful move down.
This is a useful nuance for readers: oscillator extremes can sometimes be followed by continuation lower, but there are also documented instances where the market uses the low as a liquidity grab before reversing. The current debate among traders is essentially whether BTC is repeating the latter type of bear-market ending behavior.
From $64,000 to the bigger question: are these signals converging?
The article ties these RSI narratives together with BTC’s return above $64,000 this month. It states that the move coincided with bullish RSI divergences across multiple time frames—an alignment that, if it continues to hold, can strengthen the argument that downside momentum is fading.
Importantly, the article does not frame the recovery as a guarantee. Oscillator-based “bottom” calls can be directionally correct but timing can slip, especially if broader risk sentiment or macro conditions remain unstable. That said, the convergence of several independent oscillator themes—two-month stochastic RSI approaching key lows, and RSI divergences appearing across time frames—may be why so many traders are treating this period as decision-heavy.
Earlier commentary referenced in the article also shows how widely these comparisons have been circulating this year. In April, another trader (“Quantum Ascend”) reportedly described BTC’s price behavior as “playing out nearly perfectly” relative to the 2022 bear market, reflecting how closely many participants are watching for structural repetition.
What to watch next
For now, the most actionable watch item from Max Crypto’s thesis is whether two-month stochastic RSI actually reaches zero again after entering oversold territory; if it does, the historical parallel implied by the indicator may gain credibility. Traders should also monitor whether RSI divergences continue to persist across higher and lower time frames—because a late breakdown would be the clearest sign that the market is not repeating past bear-market patterns.
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