Bitcoin is behaving very differently this cycle

In Bitcoin’s 13-year existence, as long as you held your Bitcoin for four years, you’d be up on your investment — a seemingly random number that investors can thank the Bitcoin halving cycle for.
Approximately every four years, the amount of Bitcoin rewarded to Bitcoin miners is cut in half (a.k.a. the Bitcoin halving) — decreasing the supply of Bitcoin entering the market.
In past cycles, would never drop below the previous cycle’s peak price, but we’re close to breaking this trend. According to Bloomberg, peaked at ~$19,511 in the last cycle — and now we’re only 8% away from reaching this level.
None of the past halving cycles landed on a period with both rising inflation and interest rates. Macroeconomic conditions are the worst in decades — comparable to the 2000 dot-com bubble.
Macroeconomist and tech investor Tascha Che — thinks this may be crypto’s dot-com moment and that markets can fall another 50%.
Per Nuveen Chief Investment Strategist Brian Nick, “Bitcoin trades like a penny stock” and “if it can move 20% in two days, it can move another 20% the next two days” (BBG).
Per Arthur Hayes, former CEO of crypto exchange BitMEX, $1,000 and $20,000 are the price levels to watch. Investors can expect “massive sell pressure” if we hit these levels, based on Deribit options data.