Bitcoin has slid roughly 50% this market cycle, a markedly milder pullback than in prior cycles, according to Fidelity Digital Assets. The firm’s researchers note that post-peak declines have historically ranged from 80% to 90%, but this cycle has seen a substantially smaller drawdown.
Fidelity’s data suggest a pattern of diminishing returns when looking at price performance from the previous all-time high, a sign of a maturing market. “Each cycle has been less dramatic to the upside than the previous,” Fidelity analyst Zack Wainwright said, adding that downside risk has been less pronounced in 2026 as well.
From a price perspective, Bitcoin touched a cycle low just above $60,000 on Feb. 6, representing a drop of about 52% from the Oct. 6 all-time high near $126,000, according to TradingView. It has since traded at roughly a 46% retreat from its peak six months earlier. For context, the prior cycle featured a much deeper decline—about 77%—from the 2021 high near $69,000 to a bear-market low just below $16,000 in November 2022.
Key takeaways
Fidelity Digital Assets’ assessment: this cycle’s drawdown (~50%) is substantially smaller than the historical 80–90% range, signaling a maturing market with potentially reduced volatility.
Current price action: cycle low around $60k on Feb. 6, with ~52% fall from the all-time high of ~$126k and ~46% below the six-month peak.
Historical comparison: the previous bear phase saw a sharper 77% decline to a sub-$16k trough in late 2022, underscoring a notable shift in cycle severity.
Halving cadence and bottom timing: Alphractal founder Joao Wedson highlighted a decaying pattern where the top occurred 534 days after the last halving, implying a bottom could fall between 912 and 922 days after halving—pointing to late September or early October 2026, though this remains a cycle-based projection.
Technical watchlist: Bitcoin remains below the 50-day and 200-day exponential moving averages, with the 200-week EMA hovering around $68,000 and acting as a historical support level during downturns.
A shallower cycle, a maturing market
Fidelity’s framework suggests that the current cycle’s more gradual drawdown and compressed upside signal a shift in market dynamics. The research implies growing institutional interest and a broader base of participants that can absorb volatility without triggering extreme selloffs. In discussing the implications, Nick Ruck, director of LVRG Research, described the development as a move toward a more stable Bitcoin—one that could pave the way for deeper adoption beyond speculative trading.
“This shift signals that Bitcoin is changing from a speculative asset toward a more stable store of value, potentially paving the way for greater adoption in the future.”
Where the chart stands and what traders are watching
Despite the shallower drawdown, Bitcoin’s price action remains cautious. The asset has been trading in a zone where traditional trend indicators—such as moving averages—still show a wrestle between momentum and consolidation. The 50-day and 200-day exponential moving averages remain as benchmarks to gauge short- and mid-term momentum, while the 200-week EMA near $68,000 has historically provided a floor during extended downturns. This confluence of levels is a focal point for traders assessing whether a new leg higher can begin or if price action will retest prior support.
Halvings, cycles, and future pacing
Wedson’s observation about the halving cycle adds a nuanced layer to the discussion. He noted that Bitcoin’s peak arrived 534 days after the last halving—a shorter interval than in the previous cycle—highlighting a “decaying pattern” across cycles. If the bottom timing aligns with his projection that bottoms may occur roughly 912 to 922 days after halving, the window would imply a potential low in late September or early October 2026. While such timing draws from historical cycle dynamics, it remains a probabilistic forecast rather than a guarantee, underscoring the uncertainty that still surrounds Bitcoin’s macro path.
That framing reinforces a broader narrative: as cycles compress and volatility bottoms, investors may rely more on structural drivers—institutional participation, macro policy, and on-chain activity—to gauge the sustainability of a new regime for Bitcoin as an asset class.
Looking ahead, market participants will be closely watching whether Bitcoin can reclaim the shorter-term moving averages and whether the observed shallower drawdown persists as macro conditions evolve. The coming months could illuminate whether the market’s maturation translates into steadier pricing, greater institutional involvement, and clearer adoption milestones—or whether fresh shocks reintroduce the volatility that defined earlier cycles.
This article was originally published as Fidelity: Bitcoin drawdown this cycle milder, signaling resilience on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.
Bitcoin has slid roughly 50% this market cycle, a markedly milder pullback than in prior cycles, according to Fidelity Digital Assets. The firm’s researchers note that post-peak declines have historically ranged from 80% to 90%, but this cycle has seen a substantially smaller drawdown. Fidelity’s data suggest a pattern of diminishing returns when looking at [...]