Bitcoin’s current position relative to its 365-day moving average places the market in a familiar historical context rather than an isolated decline.
Chart, shared by CryptoQuant, compares multiple instances where Bitcoin crossed below the 365-day moving average, mapping price performance over the days that followed each downside crossover.
The current trajectory, marked as beginning on November 12, 2025, shows Bitcoin tracking within the range of prior correction phases rather than diverging into uncharted territory.
The chart overlays several historical periods following a downside cross of the 365DMA, including episodes from 2018, 2020, and 2022, allowing for direct comparison based on days elapsed since the breakdown.
Visually, the current path sits below the early 2022 trajectory at the same point in time, indicating that the present correction has progressed more rapidly in price terms. In contrast, the 2022 decline developed more gradually in its initial phase before extending deeper later in the cycle.
At the same time, the chart shows that past corrections following the 365DMA breakdown typically did not resolve quickly, with price remaining under pressure for extended periods before stabilizing or reversing.
The highlighted “current position” on the chart shows Bitcoin still within the early-to-mid portion of the historical correction window when measured by time since the downside cross.
While some past cycles eventually recovered from similar levels, the chart suggests that volatility and downside persistence were common features during this phase. The wide dispersion of historical paths reinforces that early stabilization attempts often occurred well before a durable trend change.
Importantly, the chart does not show previous instances where price immediately reversed after the 365DMA breakdown. Instead, the dominant historical pattern is one of prolonged adjustment.
Based on the chart alone, the current correction appears faster in magnitude but not yet extended in duration compared to prior cycles. This places Bitcoin in a phase where downside pressure has already materialized, but historical precedent suggests that additional time, not necessarily additional depth, has often been required before resolution.
The chart emphasizes process over prediction. It illustrates how markets historically behave after losing long-term trend support, rather than where price must go next.
Bitcoin’s move below the 365-day moving average aligns with past correction structures shown on the chart. While the current drawdown has developed more quickly than some prior cycles, it remains early in time relative to historical post-breakdown periods.
The chart highlights that corrections following a 365DMA downside cross tend to persist, focusing the market on absorption and stabilization rather than immediate recovery. Confirmation of a shift would require deviation from these historical patterns, something the chart does not yet display.
The post Bitcoin’s 365-Day Moving Average Breakdown Mirrors Past Correction Phases appeared first on ETHNews.


