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Markets

Bitcoin fell to $58,000, entering a historical bear market support zone

Bitcoin dropped to $58,000, entering a price zone historically associated with major cycle lows according to long-term power law models. While data does not confirm this as an absolute bottom

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 25, 2026
4 min read
NEWS
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Bitcoin dropped to $58,000, entering a price zone historically associated with major cycle lows according to long-term power law models. While data does not confirm this as an absolute bottom, the move brings Bitcoin into a range that has frequently appeared during the most significant downturns since 2014.

Power law model signals and support levels

Analyst Giovanni’s power law model places Bitcoin’s long-term trend value at approximately $135,000. The recent decline to $58,000 puts Bitcoin about 54% below its all-time high and 1.22 standard deviations under the model’s long-term trend line, highlighting the depth of this correction.

Giovanni points out that previous cycle lows in 2012, 2015, 2019, 2020, and 2022 also clustered within similar statistical ranges. Therefore, rather than indicating a break in long-term growth, the current drop signals that Bitcoin has returned to zones historically linked to deep bear market lows.

Within Giovanni’s framework, the often-watched minus one standard deviation support level stands near $68,000, while the historically stronger base sits around $55,000. Giovanni adds that, for the power law to be invalidated, Bitcoin would have to trade below roughly $17,000 for over a year.

Mini glossary: The power law model is a statistical approach that evaluates Bitcoin’s price relative to a long-term, upward-curving growth trend. Standard deviation measures how far the current price deviates from that long-term trajectory.

A second indicator also points to compelling value: Bitcoin’s power law quantile has dropped to 6.2%, meaning the asset is now cheaper than approximately 94% of its past readings according to the model. Similar levels were last seen at notable cycle bottoms in 2015, 2020, and 2023.

Heavy selling pressure and short-term thresholds

The sharp market pullback was attributed to intense selling on Binance, with hourly taker sell volume reaching $2.1 billion. This was followed by another $1.9 billion in sales in the hour after the New York market opened, marking the strongest single-hour selling pressure on the exchange since May 4.

This aggressive cascade triggered more than $300 million in liquidations of leveraged long Bitcoin positions, after which prices rebounded towards $60,000. Analysts note that reclaiming $60,000 on the daily close could preserve positive RSI divergence, a technical signal suggesting that, even if prices set lower lows, the momentum behind selling might be weakening.

Futures trader Byzantine General explains that the drop to $58,000 flushed out excess leverage in long positions while simultaneously attracting new short sellers. In his view, a daily close above $60,000 could consolidate the case for a local bottom in Bitcoin.

Key support at $55,000, resistance near $68,000

Data from the derivatives markets indicate that the next major support area is around $55,000. On the upside, attention is focused on the $65,000 to $68,000 range, which is characterized by high interest and concentrated liquidation events. Over $4 billion in short positions would be liquidated near $65,000, compared with about $1 billion in liquidations below $55,000.

LevelKey Data$60,000Crucial short-term threshold for daily close$65,000Over $4 billion concentrated in short liquidations$68,000Upside liquidity and interest zone$54,000–$55,000Realized price and historical support

Failure to close the day above $60,000 could reinforce bearish momentum on both the short- and long-term charts. In that scenario, the focus would shift towards $55,000. This level coincides with the weekly range low for September 2024 and aligns with the realized price at around $54,000.

The realized price, which tracks the average cost basis across all coins on-chain, has consistently acted as support at every major Bitcoin bear market low since 2014. As a result, if selling pressure continues, traders are likely to closely monitor the $54,000–$55,000 band as a key market pivot.

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