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Eid‑Day BTC Buffet: From a Six‑Cent Appetizer to a $70K Main Course
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Eid‑Day BTC Buffet: From a Six‑Cent Appetizer to a $70K Main Course

By our Markets Desk3 min read

Bitcoin's Eid price chart is the ultimate degen roller‑coaster, a ride that makes your average altcoin pump look like a gentle stroll. Back on Eid 2010, you could grab a whole BTC for the price of a forgotten soda in a vending machine—roughly $0.06. Flash forward to Eid 2026, and that same digital souvenir is lounging near $70,500, marking a frankly obscene climb of about 117,499,900% over a 16‑year span. That's not just gains; that's generational trauma for anyone who sold early.

The year‑by‑year ledger reads like a fever dream from a crypto oracle: a cool $3 in 2011, $5 in 2012, then a hop to $100 in 2013 that had early adopters feeling like kings. It was $450 in 2014, a classic "rekt" back down to $280 in 2015, then the recovery began: $660 in 2016 and $2,550 in 2017. The party rolled on to $6,650 (2018), $7,400 (2019), $8,700 (2020), before a surge to $45,400 (2021) made everyone's charts go vertical. A dip to $38,000 (2022) and $27,100 (2023) tested diamond hands, leading to a rebound to $67,500 (2024), $83,500 (2025), and the current $70,500 (2026). The 2026 figure is a sobering 15.57% lower than the 2025 peak on the same day, a reminder that even in crypto, what goes up must occasionally take a breather.

If you'd employed a "DCA on Eid" strategy, you'd have nailed some legendary bottoms and bought some terrifying tops—a perfect simulation of the emotional whiplash that defines this market. Some purchases would have landed right before epic rallies, others during phases so overheated they could fry an egg. Yet, through it all, the long‑term trend has stubbornly pointed skyward, making hodling look like a genius move despite the gut‑churning dips.

One corporate entity that has turned this Eid‑day game into a core business model is Michael Saylor's Strategy (the artist formerly known as MicroStrategy). The firm now sits on a dragon's hoard of 761,068 BTC—about 3.6% of the total supply—acquired for a cool $57.61 billion at an average cost of $75,696 per coin. Their treasury maximalism strategy launched on August 11, 2020, with a $250 million purchase of 21,454 BTC and has since expanded through bull runs and bear markets alike, with the conviction of a preacher at a blockchain revival.

Peering into the crystal ball, Bitcoin currently trades well below its all‑time high near $126,200, clearly indicating a correction is in full swing. The analysts' chorus points to policy as the main DJ: the GENIUS Act is already law (July 2025), but the CLARITY Act is stuck in Senate purgatory. Citi, feeling the legislative lag, trimmed its BTC target to $112,000, while the Fed's March 2026 outlook suggests only one rate cut this year, hardly the liquidity firehose degens dream of.

Crypto Patel's latest chart analysis notes that the ascending trendline that had been cradling BTC since 2023 has finally broken, and a grumpy bearish order block now camps between $90,000 and $98,000. He's eyeing three potential accumulation zones for brave buyers at $56,611, $44,193, and $34,499 (derived from everyone's favorite math wizard, Fibonacci). Under this scenario, BTC might need to visit a lower floor before the next mansion party, with long‑range price targets set at $150,000, $250,000, and a moon‑shot $350,000.

In the end, Eid‑day pricing offers a neat, annual snapshot of Bitcoin's absolutely unhinged journey—a tale of life‑changing gains, periodic portfolio pain, and endless speculation about what the next holiday feast will serve up for the crypto faithful.

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Publishergascope.com
Published
UpdatedMar 21, 2026, 06:36 UTC

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