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Tuesday Nov 18 2025 08:50
2 min
Bitcoin's price dip below $10,000 has sparked widespread concern about a potential prolonged bear market. However, Maximiliaan Michielsen, an analyst at crypto ETP issuer 21Shares, offers a contrasting perspective. Michielsen argues that this decline represents a short-term correction rather than the beginning of a deep or long-lasting bear market.
Key Takeaways from the Analysis:
The 21Shares analysis points to three primary factors contributing to Bitcoin's recent weakness:
Despite these challenges, the analysis also notes positive signals in the market. For instance, selling pressure from long-term investors has significantly diminished, and assets are being transferred to new, more stable holders. Additionally, liquidity conditions are expected to improve, with US quantitative tightening projected to end in December and government spending set to resume. Furthermore, global money supply continues to expand, which typically supports Bitcoin.
In the macroeconomic context, investors' increasing demand to hedge against fiat currency devaluation is enhancing Bitcoin's appeal as a store of value. While Bitcoin has technically entered a short-term bear market, the analysis suggests that this decline is more of a valuation reset than a deep crash exceeding 80%.
Crucially, no classic bear market catalysts are currently present: no securities defaults, systemic frauds, regulatory shocks, or macroeconomic contraction cycles. Historical data indicates that corrections of this magnitude typically end within one to three months and often mark a consolidation phase before another rally. Long-term, Bitcoin's fundamentals remain strong, and the outlook remains constructive.
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