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Bitcoin's Van de Poppe-Style Bottom Pattern Resurfaces: Is the 130% Rally Path Still Valid?
A technical bottom formation that aligned with a powerful 130% Bitcoin rally in 2024 has reappeared in 2026, prompting analysts to question whether history will repeat itself. However, the current market backdrop—characterized by shifting fund flows, persistent inflation concerns, and deteriorating liquidity—paints a starkly different picture from the conditions that fueled the previous cycle’s explosive gains.
Van de Poppe’s P&L Analysis: Historical Signals in a New Market Context
Prominent analyst Michaël van de Poppe has highlighted Bitcoin’s interaction with critical supply-level equilibrium through the profit/loss chart, drawing parallels to the 2023 bottom formation that preceded the subsequent rally. The pattern mirrors historical bottoming phases where the market consolidated at these precise levels before breaking higher.
Van de Poppe’s framework centers on the relationship between price action and the distribution of holdings across profit and loss zones. In 2023, the transition from elevated risk conditions to sustained buying pressure coincided with the start of a significant bullish expansion. The current configuration shows similar technical structures forming, yet the follow-through remains notably weaker.
Data from Swissblock indicates that Bitcoin has now logged 25 consecutive days in its “extreme high risk” zone—the longest stretch on record, surpassing the 23-day peak observed in 2023. Historically, prolonged stays in this zone have preceded either late-stage selloffs or capitulation-driven bottoms. The signal is technically valid; the conviction behind it is not.
The Liquidity Conundrum: Why 2026 May Not Mirror 2024
Trader positioning data undermines confidence in an immediate uptrend. Analysis shows that 30-day demand metrics continue oscillating between positive and negative territory. While selling pressure has eased, sustained accumulation by strong hands has failed to establish clear dominance—a critical prerequisite for conviction-driven rallies.
The broader liquidity environment compounds this hesitation. Over the past several months, cumulative inflows into gold ETFs have surpassed spot Bitcoin ETF activity on a 90-day rolling average basis. Bitcoin-focused funds have faced persistent outflows, averaging -$2.06 billion on a rolling basis. This divergence signals that institutional capital remains cautious despite technical signals.
Macroeconomic headwinds reinforce the bearish undertone. The Personal Consumption Expenditures index, which the Federal Reserve targets for policy decisions, sits near 2.9% year-on-year, with core inflation near 3.0% and core services above 3.4%. The recent trend has shown no clear downward trajectory, suggesting limited near-term expectations for monetary easing and liquidity expansion.
Technical Signals vs. Market Reality: What Price Levels Matter Most
The price structure remains contentious among analysts. Willy Woo, of CMCC Crest, noted that short-term recovery rallies toward $70,000 to $80,000 are likely to encounter renewed selling pressure, as “the broader regime is heavily bearish with both spot and futures liquidity deteriorating.”
Current BTC price stands at $68.14K with a 24-hour decline of -4.44%, reflecting the uncertainty pervading the market. Historical support levels provide a roadmap for potential recovery scenarios: $45,000 aligns with prior bear market floors, while $30,000 and $16,000 mark longer-term supports tied to cycle preservation.
Deep Bitcoin corrections historically consume considerable time to resolve. Excluding the 2020 COVID-era bounce, which benefited from aggressive monetary stimulus, recoveries from 50% drawdowns typically unfold over extended periods rather than explosive V-shaped recoveries. Van de Poppe’s analysis suggests that even if the technical bottom pattern is valid, the path to a 130% rally may require a more prolonged consolidation and accumulation phase than the 2024 precedent offered.
The fundamental tension remains: the technical fractal offers a roadmap from the 2023 playbook, yet the macro environment has shifted materially since then. Whether this cycle can replicate 2024’s explosive trajectory hinges on whether institutions resume capital deployment and inflation expectations reset lower—conditions that are not yet evident in current data flows.