Bitcoin (BTC) and Crypto Bear Market Exhibiting Characteristics Similar to Previous Cycles

CoinGecko’s recent research study provides a comprehensive examination of Bitcoin’s bear market patterns, offering insightful and in-depth context for the ongoing downturn in 2025 and 2026. According to the latest research report, released on June 25, 2026, a bear market is identified as any period of at least 30 consecutive days during which Bitcoin’s daily closing price remains below its 200-day simple moving average.

According to insights from CoinGecko, this metric helps distinguish prolonged weakness from temporary fluctuations by focusing on the long-term trend.

Since 2014, the analysis identifies seven such episodes. The most extended ones stemmed from major structural disruptions.

For instance, the 2018-2019 downturn persisted for 385 days following the peak of initial coin offering enthusiasm, as retail interest faded and global regulations tightened.

Similarly, the 2022-2023 bear market lasted 381 days, sparked by the Terra-LUNA collapse and subsequent failures at major firms like Three Arrows Capital, Celsius, and FTX, which eroded institutional trust and pushed prices below $16,000.

The 2014-2015 cycle endured 321 days after the Mt. Gox exchange meltdown shattered early market confidence.

Shorter bear periods arose from more isolated events. A 2019-2020 consolidation ran for 81 days, while a 2021 correction triggered by China’s mining restrictions lasted 80 days.

The briefest, the 2020 COVID-19 crash, spanned just 52 days but delivered a sharp liquidity shock before stimulus measures aided recovery.

On average, these seven bear markets lasted about 188 days, highlighting wide variation in length depending on underlying causes.

The current 2025-2026 bear market reached 233 days as of June 24, 2026, positioning it as the fourth longest.

It followed Bitcoin’s all-time high near $124,773 in January 2025, with prices falling to a low of around $60,862 on June 7.

This represents a maximum drawdown of 51.2 percent so far—the mildest among all recorded cycles.

In contrast, the three major structural bears saw declines ranging from 76.7 percent to 83.6 percent, erasing the bulk of previous gains.

Even shorter shocks, like the COVID period, produced drawdowns exceeding 74 percent.

The relatively contained losses this time may stem from greater institutional involvement, a maturing market infrastructure, and macroeconomic factors including interest rate volatility and capital shifts toward artificial intelligence themes.

As of late June 2026, Bitcoin traded near $62,651, roughly 2.9 percent above its recent bottom, while the 200-day moving average hovered around $76,450, creating a 22 percent gap.

Historical patterns indicate that reclaiming this average after a confirmed low has taken between 65 and 166 days.

Should the June 7 bottom hold, the quickest recovery precedent points to a potential crossover as early as August 2026, though longer timelines cannot be ruled out.

CoinGecko’s research findings emphasize that bear markets differ significantly in depth and duration. Structural collapses tend to inflict the heaviest damage, while the present cycle reflects evolving market resilience.

For participants, this data underscores the importance of historical perspective and patience amid extended periods of underperformance, even as the asset demonstrates improved durability compared to past episodes. The research report from CoinGecko serves as yet another reminder that while downturns test resolve, they have consistently paved the way for subsequent recoveries in Bitcoin’s 15+ year history.



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