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Galaxy Digital warns bitcoin could drop to $56,000

Galaxy Digital warns bitcoin could drop to $56,000

With few catalysts and persistent selling pressure, bitcoin risks falling to $56,000–58,000, says Alex Thorn, head of research at Galaxy Digital.

Between January 28th and 31st bitcoin fell 15%, hitting a local low of $75,644. The sharp move triggered more than $2bn of futures long liquidations—among the largest such events on record.

Prices slipped below the average purchase price of US spot bitcoin-ETF shares ($84,000) and breached the cost basis of coins on Strategy’s balance sheet ($76,037).

January marked a fourth consecutive red month for the asset, a run last seen in 2018.

Thorn noted a “gap” in the distribution of coins between $70,000 and $82,000. A test of the lower bound looks likely.

If the decline continues, the next key supports are:

“Historically these levels have marked market-cycle bottoms and offered an excellent entry point for long-term investors,” the researcher said.

At the time of writing the report, 46% of bitcoin holders were underwater. Thorn stressed that the current drawdown from the all-time high is 38%. Apart from 2017, 40% declines have always deepened to 50% or more within three months.

Outflows from ETFs add pressure. Over the past two weeks the funds have shed $2.8bn.

The analyst also pointed to the failure of the narrative of bitcoin as a hedge against fiat debasement. Against geopolitical instability and debt woes, investors have favoured traditional metals—gold and silver—over digital gold.

The only positive signal, he said, is a slowdown in profit-taking by long-term HODLers. Yet there are still no signs of meaningful whale accumulation.

Demand for bitcoin wanes

An analyst known as Darkfost said spot demand is drying up. On Binance, trading volume in the leading cryptocurrency has fallen from $200bn (in October) to $104bn.

Metrics have fallen back to early-2024 lows.

Outflows of stablecoins from exchanges are also weighing. Their market capitalisation has dropped by roughly $10bn.

Justin d’Anethan, head of research at Arctic Digital, linked the current troubles to macroeconomics. Uncertainty around the policy of the Federal Reserve and the possible appointment of Kevin Warsh threaten a stronger dollar. That hurts risk assets.

Even so, d’Anethan called the market’s decline “a bitter but necessary medicine”. The correction will flush out excess leverage and cool speculation.

Joao Wedson, founder of Alphractal, thinks bitcoin has not yet bottomed. In his view, the turn comes when short-term holders realise losses below the realised price of long-term investors. That has not happened yet.

Wedson warned that a drop below the $74,000 support could push bitcoin into bear‑market territory.

At press time the leading cryptocurrency traded at $78,696 (+2.5% over 24 hours).

15‑minute BTC/USDT chart on Binance. Source: TradingView.

In February, Bernstein analysts forecast a $60,000 floor for bitcoin.

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