TLDR: Bitcoin has dropped 53% from its October 2025 peak, trading near $66,000 as of late March 2026. Historical bear cycles saw drawdowns of 77–84%, placing theTLDR: Bitcoin has dropped 53% from its October 2025 peak, trading near $66,000 as of late March 2026. Historical bear cycles saw drawdowns of 77–84%, placing the

Where Is Bitcoin’s Bottom After a 53% Decline? On-Chain Data and Historical Cycles Have the Answer

2026/03/28 21:12
3 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

TLDR:

  • Bitcoin has dropped 53% from its October 2025 peak, trading near $66,000 as of late March 2026.
  • Historical bear cycles saw drawdowns of 77–84%, placing the current 53% decline short of prior lows.
  • New whale cost basis at $82,800 creates heavy overhead resistance, making sustained recovery structurally difficult.
  • The macro support floor sits at $54,300, with a key cluster between $55,900 and $58,900 as the bottom zone.

Bitcoin is down 53% from its peak, raising urgent questions about cycle positioning. As of late March 2026, BTC trades near $66,000, having fallen sharply from its October 2025 high.

On-chain data, whale cost basis levels, and historical drawdown patterns now form the basis of serious cycle analysis.

The evidence points to a market still navigating overhead resistance, with macro support sitting well below current prices.

Historical Cycles Place the 53% Drop in Context

A 53% decline from peak sounds severe, but history tells a more measured story. The 2017–18 bear market saw Bitcoin drop 84% from its high.

The 2021–22 cycle produced a 77% drawdown before a floor formed. By those standards, the current 53% correction has not yet reached the depths that prior cycles demanded.

That context does not rule out further downside. Historically, the 40–70% drawdown range has remained active deep into bear phases.

A move toward the $58,000–$55,000 zone would push the drawdown closer to 55–56%, which still falls within the historical range without triggering alarm. Markets rarely bottom before the majority of participants exhaust their confidence.

On-chain analyst Burak Kesmeci noted that key whale cost basis levels tell a clear structural story. New whales, defined as holders with coins younger than 155 days, carry a cost basis of $82,800.

With BTC near $66,000, this group sits in significant unrealized loss. Recovery becomes structurally difficult when a major holder cohort remains underwater at levels far above current price.

Key Levels That Will Determine Where the Bottom Forms

The Short-Term Holder cost map as of March 26 confirms the overhead picture. The STH Realized Price overall stands at $86,900.

The 1M–3M cohort sits at $82,600, the 3M–6M cohort at $96,000, and the 365-day SMA at $97,700. Every major cost cluster remains well above current price, functioning as resistance rather than support.

The nearest overhead level to watch is the STH 1W–1M cost basis at $70,100. A weekly close above that level would mark the first real structural progress.

However, it remains far from resolving the broader wall of supply sitting between $82,600 and $97,700. Without a close above $86,900, those bands stay active as resistance.

On the downside, two levels form a meaningful support cluster. The Binance User Deposit Address sits at $58,900, and Miner Whale cost basis falls at $55,900.

Below those, the macro support floor based on the Realized Price rests at $54,300. That $54,000–$58,000 range represents the most credible bottoming zone if selling pressure persists through current levels.

The post Where Is Bitcoin’s Bottom After a 53% Decline? On-Chain Data and Historical Cycles Have the Answer appeared first on Blockonomi.

Market Opportunity
NEAR Logo
NEAR Price(NEAR)
$1,1889
$1,1889$1,1889
+%0,33
USD
NEAR (NEAR) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.