5th Worst Bitcoin Price Action Ever — Buying at 99.8% Probability
The bitcoin price looks bad, but I'm buying. Price might go lower — it always can — but there is value at these levels, and I'm accumulating. It's worth being upfront about how I'm actually acting on the analysis I publish, rather than presenting data from a safe distance. And right now, the data is saying something that has only been said a handful of times in Bitcoin's entire history. Let me cut to the chase: the Crosby Ratio Z-score has one of the lowest readings in history. The RSI sits at a level we've only encountered a handful of times during extreme market lows. Bitcoin has bounced off the 200-week moving average. The SOPR is in the bottom fifth percentile of all historical readings. The Mayer Multiple is also in its bottom fifth percentile.
The Crosby Ratio Z-score measures Bitcoin's price momentum and standardizes it for Bitcoin's evolving volatility. It's not a fixed threshold — it adjusts as the market matures and volatility compresses, making it applicable across every stage of Bitcoin's history. The current reading sits around -1.7. That means 99.8% of all days in Bitcoin's history have registered a less extreme reading on this indicator. Figure 1: The Crosby Ratio Z-Score has just dipped to one of its lowest ever values. The list of instances where this reading has been as low: the recent drop to $60,000, the first break below $20,000 in 2022, the COVID crash in March 2020, and the 2018 bear market low. That's it. Four occasions in over a decade of price history. Every single one of them turned out to be a significant accumulation opportunity.
The Relative Strength Index is one of the most widely used momentum indicators across all markets. Bitcoin's weekly RSI is currently at one of the lowest levels ever. The previous instances of readings this low were the 2015 bear market low, the 2018 bear market low, the COVID crash, and the recent drop to $60,000. Figure 2: The Relative Strength Index is comparable to historical lows. Two independent momentum indicators, measured completely differently, but producing the same short list of historical comparisons. That kind of confluence across methodologies isn't something to dismiss — even if it feels like the market is actively testing your conviction.
The 200-Week Moving Average has served as bear market support throughout Bitcoin's history. The only meaningful exception was the FTX collapse in late 2022, which caused a brief but sharp undershoot before a rapid recovery. Outside of that event, this level has held as a floor every single cycle. Figure 3: Bitcoin currently sits just above its 200WMA. Bitcoin has just bounced off that level again. Directly beneath current prices sits the recent cycle low, creating the structure for a potential double bottom — one of the more reliable technical formations across any market. The 200-week moving average and the Bitcoin Realized Price converge in approximately the same zone, adding further weight to this level as meaningful structural support.
The Spent Output Profit Ratio is currently in the bottom fifth percentile of all historical readings. This means the rate of realized losses across the Bitcoin network — the pace at which holders are selling at a loss — is in the deepest 5% of anything we've ever recorded. The selling that has driven this move has been predominantly short-term in nature; value days destroyed data confirms that long-term holders have largely not participated in this liquidation. These are short-term traders and leveraged positions being cleared out, and not the conviction holders capitulating. Figure 4: The Spent Output Profit Ratio illustrates the severity of recent losses. The Mayer Multiple, which measures Bitcoin's price relative to its 200-day moving average, is simultaneously in its own bottom fifth percentile. When these two indicators have historically been in their lower extremes at the same time, the resulting accumulation opportunities have been exceptiona
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