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So Mike McGlone from Bloomberg Intelligence is doubling down on something pretty controversial — he thinks Bitcoin could actually crash back to $10,000. But here's the thing: he's put a very specific line in the sand at $75,000. If BTC decisively breaks and holds above that level, his whole bearish thesis falls apart. If it doesn't, he reckons we're headed much lower.
Let me break down his logic here. McGlone points out that before all that crazy money printing in 2020-21, Bitcoin basically lived around $10,000 for years. That's not random — it's where massive historical volume sits. When you look at the charts, $10,000 has been the most heavily traded price zone since 2017 when CME futures launched. So his argument is that without all that stimulus and zero-rate liquidity, Bitcoin might just revert to what he sees as its natural equilibrium.
The structural headwinds he's pointing to are interesting though. Back in 2017, Bitcoin basically was crypto. Now? Millions of tokens are competing for attention and capital. That explosion in supply is a drag on the market leader. Add in stablecoins becoming the dominant trend, and you've got a situation where newer assets are outperforming the OG. Some analysts even expect stablecoins to eventually outpace Ethereum and Bitcoin in total value locked.
Now, the $75,000 level is key here. It's been a major turning point over the past year — the March-April 2025 slide stopped there, and the early 2024 rally stalled at that exact zone. It also lines up with Fibonacci retracements, so it's not just technical noise. If Bitcoin can break above and hold $75K, that signals institutional flows and macro conditions are strong enough to override the reversion thesis. You'd be looking at the end of the downtrend that started from those October highs above $126,000.
But fail at $75K? Get rejected again? Then McGlone's narrative flips — Bitcoin stays trapped in a longer-term decline toward $10,000. Current price is sitting around $72.75K with modest gains, so we're right in that critical zone. The path forward probably depends on whether we see sustained buying pressure that can push through that resistance.
It's a pretty stark thesis, and honestly, a lot of people think McGlone's being too bearish here. But he's forcing the market to think about what actually supports Bitcoin's value when the easy money era is over. Whether you agree with the $10,000 target or not, the $75,000 level is definitely worth watching. That's your real decision point in the near term. Interesting times ahead for sure, and if you're tracking this stuff, definitely keeping an eye on how different assets like notcoin and major holdings behave around these levels.