Recently, the day passed when the time period leading up to Bitcoin halving was 65% complete. It turns out that in previous cycles, when this threshold was crossed, the BTC price was already past its historical bear market lows.
If a similar situation is taking place today, chances are that last month’s drop to $15,495 was the macro bottom of this cycle. So let’s take a look at how a 4-year Bitcoin halving is affecting the cryptocurrency market, and what are the chances that BTC has already ended the bear market.
Bitcoin halving occurs approximately once every 4 years. This event is at the core of the hypothesis of the cyclical nature of the cryptocurrency market. Halving causes a supply shock, so many believe it is a catalyst for long-term increases in the BTC price.
The computing machines (mining rigs) that create the Bitcoin network issue new BTC every 10 minutes. In the first four years of the network’s existence, they generated 50 BTC every 10 minutes. When the first halving occurred in 2012, the number of newly issued coins dropped to 25 BTC every 10 minutes. Then, in 2016, it was only 12.5 BTC. Currently – since the 2020 halving – only 6.25 BTC are issued after every 10 minutes.
According to the most up-to-date estimates, the next halving will occur on April 8, 2024. It will result in another reduction of the amount of Bitcoin miners are issuing to 3.125 BTC every 10 minutes.
The basic role of the halving cycle is a predetermined reduction in the issuance of new coins at predictable time intervals. Less BTC on the market (supply in circulation) while maintaining the same or increasing demand causes the asset price to rise.
Indeed, the history of long-term BTC price action shows large increases after each halving. Counting from the day of the halving to historical all-time highs (ATH), there were increases of:
9594% in 2013-2014
3012% in 2016-2017
652% in 2020-2021
Bitcoin halving completed at 65%
Well-known on-chain and Bitcoin cycle analyst @therationalroot tweeted a chart of BTC yesterday with three historical halvings. After each of them, he marked the area of 65% halving completion to indicate the price at which BTC was after that period. It turns out, according to the analyst, that today we are at the same point in the halving cycle.