Deciding $BTC Bitcoin Bear Market Trends and Bottom-Fishing Prices: The Five Most Core Questions!


Recently, many people are predicting Bitcoin positions and the best possible bottom prices.
But I think the more important questions are the following five.
1️⃣ What asset is the market currently pricing Bitcoin as?
This is the most core question.
If the market regards BTC as "digital gold," then it should behave more like a long-term store of value, with logic against fiat currency devaluation, credit expansion, and sovereign currency risk.
But if, as I mentioned earlier, if Bitcoin's nature and narrative change, and the market treats BTC as "high Beta tech stocks/liquidity assets," then its price will be more influenced by U.S. Treasury yields, the dollar, NASDAQ, AI capital siphoning, and risk appetite.
Recently, strong U.S. employment data has increased expectations for rate hikes, putting pressure on risk assets. This macro environment is crucial for how BTC is priced.
2️⃣ Who will be the next real marginal buyer?
Bitcoin's current price is driven by marginal buying.
Now, the question is: where will the future buying pressure that pushes BTC higher come from?
Is it ETF continued absorption? Corporate treasury purchases? Sovereign funds? Pensions? Retail return? Or just short-term leverage funds re-entering?
This question is very important because recent ETF capital flows are no longer one-sided friendly. Farside data shows that the cumulative net inflow of U.S. spot BTC ETFs remains large, about $53.99B, but short-term outflows indicate that "long-term institutional narratives" and "short-term capital withdrawal" are both happening simultaneously.
If the marginal buyer is long-term institutional funds, then a correction might be a structural buying opportunity.
If the marginal buyer is mainly leverage and short-term speculation, then the rebound might just be a liquidity-selling opportunity.
Personally, I believe that the next Bitcoin, the true marginal buyer, is most likely not retail investors or "believers shouting buy," but three types of funds returning: ETF/traditional asset management funds, short covering and trend funds, and strategy/corporate treasury funds.
Bitcoin has already hit around $60k. If it can stop falling here, three signals are usually needed:
Significant reduction in ETF outflows;
BTC no longer drops below $59,000–$60k and quickly loses ground;
The rebound can retake $63,000–$65k, rather than being crushed immediately after bouncing.
3️⃣ Is this decline a "leverage wipeout" or a "long-cycle distribution"?
If it's just a short-term leverage liquidation, we usually see: contract liquidations, short-term holders losing money, panic sentiment, but long-term holders not selling in large scale.
If it's a long-cycle distribution, we usually see: long-term holders start continuously selling coins, ETF outflows persist, rebounds are weak, and every rise is suppressed by trapped traders and institutional redemptions.
4️⃣ Can the scarcity narrative of Bitcoin still outweigh opportunity costs?
Many talk about BTC, only mentioning "21 million coins," "halving," "long-term scarcity." These are of course important, but not enough. Scarcity alone does not automatically lead to price increases.
Price rises require three conditions to coexist:
Scarcity supply + sustained demand + sufficiently loose or risk-taking capital environment.
The current question is: with U.S. Treasury yields still attractive, AI/tech stocks siphoning off large amounts of capital, and ETF outflows happening periodically, can Bitcoin's scarcity narrative continue to attract new capital?
Reuters recently mentioned that funds are shifting from BTC to more popular sectors like AI, semiconductors, and large IPOs, and Bitcoin's performance since 2026 has been under significant pressure.
5️⃣ If your Bitcoin judgment is wrong, what conditions will make you admit your mistake?
This is the most influential question on investment outcomes.
I need to constantly ask myself: under what circumstances will I admit that my BTC judgment was temporarily wrong?
For example:
BTC fails to recover after breaking below key cost zones?
ETF has been continuously flowing out for several weeks?
Long-term holders keep distributing?
Macro interest rates continue rising, dragging down risk assets' valuations?
Volume and capital flow can't keep up during rebounds?
Market narrative shifts from "institutional allocation of BTC" to "BTC no longer offers excess returns"?
From "price prediction" to "position management," meaning under what conditions do I add to my position? When do I stay put? When do I reduce risk? When do I admit the trend has changed?
6️⃣ My view on possible price ranges
My personal perspective is as follows:
Short-term support: $58,000–$62k (already reached)
Higher-quality bottom zone: $52,000–$56k
Extreme panic opportunity zone: $45,000–$48k
If ETF outflows significantly decrease in mid to late June, BTC might complete its first round of stabilization around $60k.
If ETF continues to flow out and macro conditions remain suppressed, the real bottom could be delayed until September or October, with prices possibly dropping to mid-$50ks or even high $40ks.
Be patient, wait, keep thinking, and stay alert!
BTC1.31%
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