Here’s How Low Bitcoin Could Fall in the Worst-Case Scenario, According to One Widely-Followed Crypto Trader
A closely followed crypto analyst is laying out Bitcoin’s worst-case scenario while also showing how BTC could shoot up to a new all-time high.
In a new thread, pseudonymous crypto analyst Pentoshi tells his 865,000 followers on the social media platform X that the top crypto asset by market cap could dip to a price in the mid-$90,000s if it were to lose support around the $101,000 to $102,000 area.
However, according to the analyst, demand for the flagship digital asset will be greater than all the BTC mined from all points, which in turn should eventually lead to a price spike.
“We are still making higher highs and higher lows, overall this is a strong uptrend… [In my opinion], the worst case scenario [if] the trend [were] to continue [is] we see mid $90,000s as the next higher low. That’s IF we lose around $101,000-$102,000 area, which is the current support.
I don’t really think you can compare this currently to 2021 because the situation isn’t the same at all, we were going into a period then of [quantitative tightening] after a period of extreme excess.
The competition currently for BTC is only growing, and I’m quite certain the demand is greater than the daily mined BTC from all data points. So demand > supply over any period of time. I think the biggest enemy of people is their own patience. I too make these mistakes [from] time to time.”
The trader’s chart indicates that BTC could dip to his target sometime between June and July before sparking a rally to the $120,000 range.
BTC is trading for $105,471 at time of writing, a 1.5% decrease during the last 24 hours.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Trump’s Federal Reserve Shakeup Raises Concerns Over Stagflation and Divides Within GOP
- Trump announced his Fed chair pick but withheld the name, criticizing resistance to removing Powell before his 2026 term ends. - Shortlisted candidates include Waller, Bowman, and Rieder, with Trump hinting at a "standard" choice amid political tensions. - The dispute with Rep. Greene over Epstein files highlights GOP fractures, as Trump accused her of betraying party loyalty. - Critics warn politicizing the Fed risks stagflation, while the Epstein files debate underscores transparency vs. loyalty tensio

YFI Drops 5.76% Over the Past Week as Overall Market Shows Weakness
- YFI fell 5.76% in 7 days and 44% annually, reflecting broader market weakness and risk-off sentiment. - Analysts link declines to macroeconomic uncertainty, profit-taking, and shifting investor psychology despite no direct catalysts. - Mixed sector updates (Eltek, iQIYI , Zymeworks) highlight varied asset-class responses to current economic conditions. - YFI remains a key digital asset indicator, with stabilization signals closely monitored amid ongoing downward pressure.

Bitcoin News Today: Concerns Over Liquidity Trigger Crypto ETF Outflows, Experts Identify a Chance to Purchase Bitcoin
- U.S. Bitcoin ETFs saw $492M net outflow on Nov 14, with BlackRock's IBIT leading a $4.63B selloff, marking its largest single-day withdrawal. - Fidelity's FBTC, WisdomTree's BTCW, and Grayscale's GBTC all reported significant redemptions, intensifying crypto liquidity fears amid 10-30% price declines. - Analysts link outflows to inflation concerns, global debt risks, and post-shutdown market uncertainty, while Ethereum ETFs lost $689M (4% of AuM) last week. - Despite 27% ETP AUM declines and whale sellin

Trump’s Federal Reserve Chair Bet: Weighing Political Pressure Against Economic Trustworthiness
- Trump announced selecting a Fed chair candidate but withheld the name, criticizing Powell's cautious rate-cutting approach amid economic slowdown. - Contenders include Waller, Bowman, and Rieder, with Bessent leading the search to balance political strategy and economic priorities. - Legal hurdles delay Powell's replacement until 2026, while Miran's potential FOMC role aligns with Trump's push for aggressive rate cuts. - Lisa Cook faces mortgage fraud allegations, and Rieder's non-academic background cha

