Bitcoin ready to record fourth straight red month and the $81,000 floor is suddenly everything


Bitcoin is struggling to avoid a fourth consecutive monthly decline as the cryptocurrency market grapples with a fundamental shift in momentum that has left most investors underwater.

Data from CryptoSlate indicate that the largest digital asset declined by nearly 7% over the last 24 hours to $82,513.

According to CoinGlass data, long traders speculating on the BTC price were liquidated for more than $750 million during the shock price collapse. This is the highest level of losses for this cohort of traders since last November.

Bitcoin Price Liquidation in the Last 24 Hours (Source: CoinGlass)

Consequently, BTC is on course to suffer its fourth consecutive red month as the crypto asset has shed more than 5% of its value this January.

This follows a 3.99% loss in December and a sharp 17% decline in November. BTC declined by 4% in October.

BTC loses 2-year moving average

Meanwhile, the poor price performance this year has led the flagship digital asset to fall below its 2-year moving average for the first time since 2022.

Bitcoin analyst Joe Consorti added:

“We’ve also lost the November 2025 lows, and are 7% away from losing the 2025 yearly low.”

Data from Alphractal highlights the significance of this shift, noting that the last time BTC traded below this level was in October 2023.

Bitcoin 2-Year Moving AverageBitcoin 2-Year Moving Average
Bitcoin 2-Year Moving Average (Source: Alphractal)

This breakdown revives a simple yet historically powerful signal. For many analysts, the loss of the 2Y SMA signals the beginning of a genuine capitulation cycle.

Historical data suggest that almost every time Bitcoin’s price has fallen below this average, the market has experienced further downside or entered a prolonged accumulation phase that lays the groundwork for the next bull cycle.

The October liquidation shock reset the cycle

The current regime dates back to Oct. 10, 2025, when the crypto market experienced one of its largest forced unwinds on record.

A surge of liquidations followed renewed tariff and export-control headlines from Washington, triggering rapid deleveraging across major venues and reducing market depth in the days that followed.

Bitcoin had set an all-time high above $126,000 earlier that month, but the liquidation episode helped yank the market out of its prior structure and reprice risk around macro headlines rather than internal crypto catalysts.

The liquidation wave totaled more than $19 billion, underscoring how much of the cycle’s upside had been financed by leverage rather than durable spot demand.

That shift matters because the market never delivered the kind of fast, confidence-restoring rebound that typically signals a trend resumption.

Instead, price action evolved into a grinding process of position reduction, with rebounds repeatedly stalling and reinforcing the sense that the market has moved from expansion into consolidation.

Something broke for crypto in October, data shows how the market changedSomething broke for crypto in October, data shows how the market changed
Related Reading

Something broke for crypto in October, data shows how the market changed

Major exchanges are suffering from a “drought” in order book depth, creating a volatility trap where even modest selling triggers massive price swings.

Dec 23, 2025 · Liam ‘Akiba’ Wright

ETF flows stabilize, but the bid has not rebuilt

The most visible sign of the demand slowdown has been in US spot Bitcoin ETFs, which helped power earlier accumulation waves but have recently shifted into a more neutral posture.

Glassnode said US spot Bitcoin ETF net flows have returned to equilibrium, with the 30-day moving average hovering near zero after a period of sustained outflows.

The change suggests mechanical sell pressure has eased, but it also implies that the aggressive inflows that previously absorbed new supply have not returned.

Glassnode also framed the market as pinned near cost-basis levels, which now serve as inflection points. The firm set the short-term holder cost basis at approximately $96,500, a level that has repeatedly capped attempts to recover.

Below the market, Glassnode highlighted a stressed support band around $83,400, with a “True Market Mean” near $80,700 if weakness deepens.

Alphractal CEO Joao Wedson issued a stark warning regarding this specific zone, stating that Bitcoin “cannot lose $81,000 under any circumstances” based on on-chain analysis.

Bitcoin Mean PriceBitcoin Mean Price
Bitcoin Mean Price (Source: Alphractal)

Wedson cautioned that if this level breaks, a capitulation process similar to 2022 may unfold, with the next major support level significantly lower at approximately $65,500.

Bitcoin's whipsaw to $105k wipes out $7B in leveraged positionsBitcoin's whipsaw to $105k wipes out $7B in leveraged positions
Related Reading

Bitcoin’s whipsaw to $105k wipes out $7B in leveraged positions

Massive sell-off causes over $7 billion in liquidations, exposing crypto’s structural weaknesses during volatile trading.

Oct 10, 2025 · Assad Jafri

Metals surge, and Washington injects policy risk

Crypto’s internal cooling has unfolded alongside a macro tape that has rewarded traditional havens.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.