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Cryptoassets are highly volatile and largely unregulated. No consumer protection. Tax on profits may apply. You should be prepared to lose all the money you invest in cryptoassets. This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptoassets are highly volatile and largely unregulated. No consumer protection. Tax on profits may apply. You should be prepared to lose all the money you invest in cryptoassets. This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.

Crypto crash: buying opportunity or value trap? What history says

 Bitcoin has fallen roughly 50% from its all-time high of $126,198 set in October 2025. This article does not tell you what to do — it lays out what history actually shows, both the case for buyers and the case that warns of more downside, so you can make a more informed decision.

Bitcoin Source: Adobe images

Written by

IG Editorial Team

IG Editorial Team

Editorial Team

Publication date

Key Takeaway

  • Bitcoin has recovered from every major bear market in its history (2011, 2015, 2018–19, 2022) — all four reached new all-time highs.
  • Recovery timelines vary significantly: the 2022 crash took nearly 2 years; the 2018 crash took almost 3 years from peak to new ATH.
  • Historical pattern: each cycle's maximum drawdown has been shallower — from -94% in 2011 to -78% in 2022. Current drawdown is -51%.
  • The case for buying: oversold technicals, DCA smooths entry risk, historical precedent of recovery, Polymarket 65% probability of BTC above $50K.
  • The case for caution: $4.21bn ETF outflows, BTC below all major EMAs, hawkish Fed (BNP Paribas forecasts rate hikes from Dec 2026).
  • DCA (dollar-cost averaging) reduces timing risk — it does not eliminate the risk of further losses. This is not financial advice.

Bitcoin has fallen roughly 50% from its all-time high of $126,198 set in October 2025. At moments like this, the question that dominates every investor's thinking is the same: is this a buying opportunity, or are prices going lower still?

This article does not tell you what to do — that depends on your individual circumstances, risk tolerance and financial goals, and this content is not financial advice. What it does is lay out what history actually shows, both the case that supports buyers and the case that warns of more downside, so you can make a more informed decision.

4 for 4

Bitcoin has recovered from every major crash in its history

-51%

Current BTC drawdown from Oct 2025 ATH of $126,198

65%

Polymarket probability of BTC falling below $50K in 2026 (June 2026)

What history actually shows: Bitcoin's major crashes and recoveries

Bitcoin has experienced four major bear markets since 2011 — each with drawdowns exceeding 75% — and has recovered from all four to reach new all-time highs. That is the strongest historical case for buyers. But the recovery timeline matters.

Cycle Peak Trough Max drawdown Recovery to new ATH
2011 $33 $2 -94% ~365 days to new ATH
2015 $1,163 $152 -87% ~490 days to new ATH
2018–19 $19,783 $3,122 -84% 1,068 days to new ATH
2022 $69,044 $15,476 -78% ~730 days to new ATH
2026 (so far) $126,198 ~$61,500 -51% so far In progress — low June 2026

Sources: Bitcoin drawdown history (Paybis, Feb 2026); TradingView/Swissquote analysis. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.

The pattern is clear: each cycle's maximum drawdown has been shallower — from -94% in 2011 to -78% in 2022. If the trend holds, the current $126K cycle could bottom anywhere between -65% and -76%, implying a trough in the $30,000–$45,000 range. That is not a prediction; it is the extrapolation of a historical pattern. Prices are already at -51%. The pattern could continue lower before finding a floor.

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The case for buying now

Here is the strongest version of the bull case. This is not a recommendation to buy.

  • History: Bitcoin has a 100% track record of recovering from major bear markets, though past performance is not a guarantee of future results.
  • Oversold technicals: Bitcoin's daily RSI fell to 16 at the June low — one of the most extreme oversold readings in this cycle. Historically, RSI below 20 has preceded relief bounces of 5–12% within 72 hours (Capital Street FX, June 2026).
  • Shallower drawdown pattern: at -51%, the current drawdown is well below the -78% trough of 2022, suggesting — though not guaranteeing — that the cycle may be less severe.
  • Reducing DCA risk: buying at regular intervals rather than in a lump sum can reduce the impact of short-term volatility on your average entry price.
  • Institutional demand: US spot Bitcoin ETFs now hold over 1 million BTC collectively, representing institutionalised demand that did not exist in previous cycles.

The case for caution

Here is the strongest version of the bear case.

  • ETF outflows: $4.21 billion in cumulative outflows over three consecutive weeks entering 9 June 2026 — the dominant demand driver is currently a source of supply (The Block/Glassnode, June 2026).
  • BTC below all major moving averages: trading below 20-day, 50-day, and 100-day EMAs creates a structurally bearish setup on the daily chart.
  • Hawkish Fed: BNP Paribas forecasts three US rate hikes from December 2026. Higher rates reduce liquidity and hurt risk assets.
  • Historical patterns can be broken: if the 2026 cycle breaks the shallower-drawdown trend, the $30K–$45K range is a plausible scenario, not an outlier.
  • Recovery timelines: even if this is a buying opportunity, the 2022 crash took two years to recover. Locking up capital in a falling asset has an opportunity cost.

What is DCA and how does it work for crypto?

Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) means investing a fixed amount at regular intervals — weekly or monthly — regardless of the current price. When the price falls, your fixed amount buys more coins; when it rises, it buys fewer. Over time, this smooths out the average price paid.

DCA does not guarantee a profit. If Bitcoin falls 70% and never recovers, a DCA strategy produces the same loss as a lump-sum investment, just at a different average price. DCA is a strategy for managing entry timing risk, not total loss risk.

Quick fact

DCA practical example

Investing £100/month for 6 months: if BTC starts at £48K, falls to £35K, then recovers to £44K, your six purchases average approximately £41K/BTC — lower than the starting price. But if BTC continues to £25K, you have still made a loss on all six purchases. DCA smooths timing risk — it does not eliminate the risk of further losses.

Is it a good time to buy crypto — summed up

  • Bitcoin has recovered from every major bear market in its history — but recovery took 1–3 years each time.
  • Current drawdown: -51% from the Oct 2025 ATH of $126,198. Historical pattern suggests a cycle bottom between -65% and -76% — but patterns can break.
  • Bull case: oversold technicals, shallower drawdown trend, institutional ETF demand, historical precedent.
  • Bear case: $4.21bn ETF outflows, BTC below all moving averages, hawkish Fed, rising inflation.
  • DCA reduces timing risk — it does not eliminate total loss risk. Only invest what you can afford to lose entirely.
  • This article is not financial advice. Cryptoassets are highly volatile.

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Frequently asked questions

Is now a good time to buy Bitcoin?

There is no objectively 'good' time to buy Bitcoin — it depends on your individual financial situation, risk tolerance, and investment horizon. History shows Bitcoin has recovered from every major bear market, but each recovery took 1–3 years and prices fell further before bottoming. If you are considering buying, you should only do so with money you are comfortable losing entirely. This is not financial advice.

What is the lowest Bitcoin has ever dropped?

Bitcoin has experienced four major drawdowns exceeding 75%: -94% in 2011, -87% in 2015, -84% in 2018–19, and -78% in 2022. The current drawdown from the October 2025 ATH of $126,198 stands at approximately -51% as of June 2026. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.

What is DCA investing?

Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) means investing a fixed amount at regular intervals — such as £100 per month — regardless of the current price. When prices fall, the fixed amount buys more units; when they rise, it buys fewer. Over time this smooths the average entry price. DCA does not guarantee profits or prevent losses if prices continue to fall. It is a strategy for managing timing risk.

How long did it take Bitcoin to recover from previous crashes?

Recovery timelines from peak to new all-time high: the 2011 crash took approximately 365 days; the 2015 crash took approximately 490 days; the 2018–19 crash took 1,068 days (nearly three years); the 2022 crash took approximately 730 days (two years). If the current cycle follows a similar pattern, recovery from the October 2025 peak could take 12–24 months from the eventual trough — which has not yet been confirmed.

What is the Polymarket probability of Bitcoin falling below $50,000?

As of June 2026, Polymarket — a prediction market — placed approximately 65% probability on Bitcoin falling below $50,000 in 2026. Prediction markets aggregate the views of many participants and can be useful as a sentiment indicator, but they are not investment research, are not regulated, and can be wrong. This is not financial advice.

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Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.