CryptoQuant says bear market has started, sees bitcoin downside risk to $70,000 A crypto bear market has already begun, according to onchain analytics firm CryptoQuant, which cited weakening bitcoin demand as a key signal. "Bitcoin demand growth has decisively slowed, signaling a transition into a bear market," CryptoQuant said in a report published Friday. "After three major spot demand waves since 2023 — driven by the U.S. spot ETF launch, the U.S. presidential election outcome, and the Bitcoin treasury companies bubble — demand growth has fallen below trend since early October 2025." The firm said this suggests that most of the incremental demand from the current cycle has already been absorbed, removing a key source of price support for bitcoin. Based on these conditions, CryptoQuant sees bitcoin downside risk toward the $70,000 level, with a deeper decline toward $56,000 possible if bitcoin fails to regain momentum. "Downside reference points suggest a relatively shallow bear market," the report said. "Historically, bitcoin bear market bottoms have aligned with the realized price, currently near $56,000, implying a potential 55% drawdown from the recent all-time high — the smallest drawdown on record. Intermediate support is expected around the $70,000 level." When asked about timing, CryptoQuant head of research Julio Moreno told The Block the move to $70,000 could occur within months, while $56,000 would be a longer-term scenario. "$70,000 could be in three to six months," Moreno said. "$56,000 would be in the second half of 2026 if it comes to that." Moreno added that the bear market effectively began around mid-November, following the largest liquidation event in crypto history on Oct. 10. Since then, demand has continued to weaken. CryptoQuant said U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs turned into net sellers in the fourth quarter of 2025, with holdings declining by roughly 24,000 BTC. That marks a sharp reversal from the same period last year, when ETFs were strong net buyers. Addresses holding between 100 and 1,000 BTC — a cohort that includes ETFs and bitcoin treasury companies — are also growing below trend, CryptoQuant said, mirroring demand deterioration seen toward the end of 2021 ahead of the 2022 bear market.
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CryptoQuant says bear market has started, sees bitcoin downside risk to $70,000

A crypto bear market has already begun, according to onchain analytics firm CryptoQuant, which cited weakening bitcoin demand as a key signal.

"Bitcoin demand growth has decisively slowed, signaling a transition into a bear market," CryptoQuant said in a report published Friday. "After three major spot demand waves since 2023 — driven by the U.S. spot ETF launch, the U.S. presidential election outcome, and the Bitcoin treasury companies bubble — demand growth has fallen below trend since early October 2025."

The firm said this suggests that most of the incremental demand from the current cycle has already been absorbed, removing a key source of price support for bitcoin.

Based on these conditions, CryptoQuant sees bitcoin downside risk toward the $70,000 level, with a deeper decline toward $56,000 possible if bitcoin fails to regain momentum.

"Downside reference points suggest a relatively shallow bear market," the report said. "Historically, bitcoin bear market bottoms have aligned with the realized price, currently near $56,000, implying a potential 55% drawdown from the recent all-time high — the smallest drawdown on record. Intermediate support is expected around the $70,000 level."

When asked about timing, CryptoQuant head of research Julio Moreno told The Block the move to $70,000 could occur within months, while $56,000 would be a longer-term scenario. "$70,000 could be in three to six months," Moreno said. "$56,000 would be in the second half of 2026 if it comes to that."

Moreno added that the bear market effectively began around mid-November, following the largest liquidation event in crypto history on Oct. 10.

Since then, demand has continued to weaken. CryptoQuant said U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs turned into net sellers in the fourth quarter of 2025, with holdings declining by roughly 24,000 BTC. That marks a sharp reversal from the same period last year, when ETFs were strong net buyers.

Addresses holding between 100 and 1,000 BTC — a cohort that includes ETFs and bitcoin treasury companies — are also growing below trend, CryptoQuant said, mirroring demand deterioration seen toward the end of 2021 ahead of the 2022 bear market.