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Is the Bitcoin Crash Over? Claude AI and ChatGPT Both Weigh In
Bitcoin is now trading around $65,000. After a brutal drop from its October 2025 peak near $126,000 to around $60,000 in February 2026 (a drawdown of more than 50%) the crypto market has stabilized in the low-to-mid $60,000 range.
The big selloff appears to have been a demand-and-leverage washout rather than a structural collapse. But is the Bitcoin crash actually over? We asked two leading AI models, ChatGPT and Claude, to weigh in. Here is what they said, and what it means for Bitcoin’s next move.
Why the Crash Happened
Bitcoin’s 2026 decline was widely linked to macro-driven deleveraging, weak risk appetite, ETF outflows, and miner stress rather than any protocol-level failure. The drop from $126,000 to $60,000 was brutal but not a reflection of Bitcoin’s fundamentals.
Several reports point to capitulation-like conditions: miner selling, repeated negative difficulty adjustments, and a large ETF outflow cycle. By mid-June, Bitcoin had recovered into roughly the $65,000 to $66,000 area after trading near $60,900 on June 10 and around $66,100 on June 15.
The main risk is not “Bitcoin dying,” but demand failing to return fast enough. If ETF outflows continue and institutional bid remains weak, another leg down is still possible, with some June analyses pointing to support zones near the low $60,000s and, in more bearish scenarios, the mid-$50,000s.
ChatGPT’s Take: “Worst Phase May Be Behind Us”
ChatGPT answered the question directly: “Is the Bitcoin crash over?” Its response was measured but cautiously optimistic.
“Probably not completely, but the worst phase may be behind us.”
The model noted that Bitcoin’s drop from roughly $126K to $60K appears to have been driven mainly by macroeconomic pressure, ETF outflows, leverage unwinding, and miner stress rather than any fundamental problem with Bitcoin itself. Since then, BTC has stabilized and recovered to around $65K, suggesting the market may be in a bottoming process.
Source: ChatGPT
However, ChatGPT emphasized that Bitcoin has not yet confirmed a durable new uptrend. Key risks remain: persistent ETF outflows, a stronger U.S. dollar, higher-for-longer interest rates, and broader risk-off conditions could still trigger another leg down toward the low $60Ks or even the mid-$50Ks.
Its bottom line: “The crash is likely in its late stage, but Bitcoin is bottoming, not fully recovered. A sustained recovery will depend on improving macro conditions and stronger demand returning to the market.”
Claude AI’s Take: “Bottoming Process, Not Full Recovery”
Claude AI offered a similarly cautious view, with a slightly more structured breakdown.
“Probably in its late stages, but not fully over; think ‘bottoming process, not full recovery.'”
Claude pointed out that Bitcoin price is at ~$65K after a brutal drop from its October 2025 peak near $126,000 ; a crash of over 50%. That selloff happened because of macro deleveraging, ETF outflows, and miner stress, not any fundamental failure of the Bitcoin network. The worst of the panic selling appears to have passed.
Source: Claude AI
Why it looks like a bottom:
Why it’s not clearly over:
The recovery hasn’t been confirmed as a durable new uptrend. The main risks that could push BTC into a second leg down include:
Read also: ChatGPT Predicts Bitcoin Price if New U.S.-Iran Peace Roadmaps Succeed Within 60 Days
Both Models Agree: The Worst Is Likely Over, But the Recovery Isn’t Confirmed
It is striking how closely ChatGPT and Claude align on this question. Both agree that the crash is probably in its late stages, that the worst panic selling has passed, and that the current price action reflects a bottoming process rather than a confirmed new uptrend. Both point to the same macro risks — sticky inflation, Fed policy, dollar strength, and ETF outflows, as the key factors that could trigger another leg down.
The cleanest bear case is: inflation stays sticky, the Fed delays easing, the dollar firms up, and ETF demand stays weak at the same time. That combination would likely be enough to send Bitcoin into a second leg down even without any crypto-specific failure.
What would argue against a deeper drop? If inflation cools, real yields fall, and ETF flows stabilize, BTC has a much better chance of holding the June recovery zone instead of breaking lower.
Miner capitulation and prior selloff pressure also mean the market may already have absorbed part of the bad news.
FAQs
Probably in its late stages, but not fully over. Both ChatGPT and Claude AI describe it as a “bottoming process” rather than a confirmed recovery.
Macro deleveraging, ETF outflows, miner stress, and leverage unwinding — not a fundamental failure of Bitcoin itself.