Bitcoin on the Brink: Will History Repeat Its 2022 Meltdown?
Another crypto winter looms—or does it? Traders scramble as Bitcoin flirts with key support levels, sparking flashbacks to 2022’s brutal 75% crash. Here’s the cold hard analysis.
The bull case: Institutional inflows hit record highs this quarter, with BlackRock’s spot ETF hoarding coins like a digital Scrooge McDuck. On-chain data shows long-term holders refusing to sell even at $60K—a sign of diamond hands or sheer denial?
The bear trap: Leverage ratios scream danger, with perpetual swaps funding rates hitting levels last seen before the Luna collapse. Meanwhile, that ’stable’ Tether premium? Gone—replaced by traders paying $0.98 to exit positions fast.
Regulatory wildcard: The SEC’s latest delay on ETH ETF approvals hints at more foot-dragging—because nothing says ’market integrity’ like letting Citadel front-run retail for another six months.
Bottom line: This isn’t 2022... until it is. The only certainty? Wall Street’s algo traders will profit either way while you HODL and pray.

Source: Glassnode
June saw Bitcoin cascade to $25k against a $32k cost basis. By September, it broke below $19k while STHs clung to a $27k average.
Each deviation below sparked sharp sell-offs, mass liquidations, and a feedback loop of fear. If Bitcoin slips below the current $93k-level, expect a replay of that volatility.
Bitcoin’s knack for defying expectations
Open Interest (OI) is a crucial metric in this equation. As Bitcoin flashes bullish signals, rising OI is seen as a green light for more liquidity and market action.
However, when Bitcoin dips, that same liquidity can become a ticking time bomb. More positions to liquidate means the risk of a liquidation avalanche, sending prices spiralling faster.
Flashback to the 2022 bear market – As Bitcoin crashed from $50k to $16k, the OI stayed stubbornly high at $20 billion – Signaling heavy leverage. When the support broke, a massive liquidation cascade followed.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin’s OI was $64.82 billion, the same level it was when BTC flirted with $100k. This suggested that the derivatives market could be getting a bit overheated.
Source: Coinglass
With Bitcoin’s knack for surprising the market, keeping tabs on these metrics is a must.
If BTC falls below its short-term holder (STH) cost basis at $93k, brace for a possible mass exodus. In fact, what might start as a small “dip” could quickly spiral into capitulation as OI positions get liquidated in unison.
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