Bitcoin at $40,000 would be ‘near-unprecedented’ statistical outcome, analyst says
Mean-reversion models suggest bearish targets imply a 0.4th percentile event, far beyond typical market corrections.
What to know:
- A drop to $40,000 would place bitcoin in the 0.4th percentile of historical price deviations, making it one of the most statistically extreme events on record.
- At around $78,000, bitcoin currently sits near the 31.5th percentile, indicating a historically weak, but still normal, correction range.
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“Just to make a point, for the bears who want to see $40k.
You may well end up right. However, consider that on a mean reversion basis, averaging relative to nine anchors (a mix of technical, onchain, trend, fast, slow etc), it is a Q 0.4 event.
Lower than $2 Bitcoin in 2011.”
After climbing over $126,000 in October, bitcoin slid more than 50% to around $60,000 in February before stabilizing. It was trading Friday near $78,000.
Talking to the bears, Check said their predictions warrant closer scrutiny.
Check points to the Bitcoin Mean Reversion Index, a composite model that averages multiple key valuation metrics, including the 200-week moving average, realized price, power law trend and a number of volume-weighted average price measures. The index ranks bitcoin’s price on a historical percentile basis.
