
Bitcoin slipped below $87,000 into the holiday week, with price action compressing rather than breaking down as liquidity thins and sentiment cools.
According to recent market updates, positioning looks cautious but not panicked, with buyers engaging near support despite risk-off flows.
The Crypto Fear and Greed Index sits at 27, placing conditions in “fear” territory, but without signs of disorderly selling.
Total digital asset market capitalization is near $2.94 trillion, while daily trading volume has eased to about $90.6 billion as participation fades ahead of the holidays.
Institutional flows are leaning risk-off in the short term. Crypto ETFs recorded net outflows of $284.1 million on December 23, which has weighed on momentum but looks like rebalancing rather than exits.
Leverage remains elevated. Aggregate open interest across derivatives is around $760 billion, dominated by perpetual futures, a setup that often precedes volatility when ranges compress.
Market structure continues to favour Bitcoin over other tokens. BTC dominance has risen to 59.1% versus Ethereum, near 12%, while the Altcoin Season Index at 18/100 reinforces a Bitcoin-led market.
Implied volatility reflects that defensive tilt. Bitcoin’s implied volatility near 44.6 is notably below Ethereum’s 68.7, suggesting BTC is being treated as a lower-beta core holding within the sector.
On lower timeframes, BTC is trading near $87,200 and consolidating inside a descending channel that has guided the price since the early-December peak near $94,600.
Buyers have repeatedly defended the $86,500–$86,700 area, with price hovering around the channel midline as moving averages flatten and momentum cools.
Recent candlesticks show small real bodies and wicks in both directions, while RSI near 43 is forming higher lows, hinting at a budding bullish divergence.
A push above $88,800 could open $90,600 and $92,700. A loss of $86,500 would expose $83,800 and $81,600.
As of December 24, 2025, Bitcoin trades around $87,000, down 6.8% year-to-date and nearly 30% below its 2025 peak after opening near $94,120 and topping above $126,000 intraday in October.
It is also down more than 22% since October 1, with tax-loss harvesting and thin liquidity keeping it in a narrow $86,700–$88,200 range.
Notably, Bitcoin is down 7.5% since Christmas Eve 2024. In the past three instances when BTC ended Christmas Eve lower year-over-year (2014, 2018, 2022), the following year averaged around a 100% gain.
| Red Christmas Year | Price (Dec 24) | The Drop (vs Prior Dec 24) | Following Christmas Price | Following Year Gain |
| 2014 | $323 | ▼ 51.5% | $455 | +40.9% |
| 2018 | $4,079 | ▼ 70.7% | $7,323 | +79.5% |
| 2022 | $16,822 | ▼ 66.9% | $43,665 | +159.6% |
| 2025 (Now) | ~$87,340 | ▼ 7.2% | ??? | (TBD) |
Those episodes saw declines of 51.4%, 70.8%, and 66.9% followed by rebounds of 40.9%, 79.4%, and 159.8% respectively.
If the pattern repeats, 2026 scenarios range from $125,000–$150,000 in a conservative case to $175,000–$200,000+ in a bull case, based on the average forward return.
Fundstrat’s Tom Lee maintains a $200,000 target for early 2026, while Grayscale sees potential for an all-time high in the first half of 2026 and Bitwise expects a break from the four-year cycle.
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