A further 5% decline in Bitcoin could initiate a surge from the “buy zone” located near $63,000.

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The Bitcoin “buy zone” meme has resurfaced, here’s its significance in the ETF era

A specific type of Bitcoin post appears right on cue. It typically shows up just after the price ceases to be enjoyable.

This week, it was shared by PricedinBTC, presented as an organized table titled “Forward Returns by Drawdown Level.”

The key figures do the heavy lifting, indicating that purchasing at a 50% drawdown supposedly yields about a 90% success rate over the following year, with average returns nearing 125%. The caption concludes with “LOCK IN,” a phrase that resembles advice and reads like a challenge.

Bitcoin returns from drawdowns (Source: PriceinBTC)

Individuals share these charts for the same reason they save workout plans. Drawdowns can confuse even those holders who claim to feel indifferent. A clear guideline provides comfort, a definitive boundary, a means to act without revisiting the entire debate each time the price declines.

This particular chart is circulating at a time when the mathematics aligns closely with the meme. Bitcoin has been trading in the high $60,000s, and the previous peak still looms over the market. This places the drawdown in the mid-40% range, sufficiently close that sustained pressure could drive it into the minus-50% category.

The chart transforms the dip into a target, and historical data offers reassurance. However, this same history also carries a cautionary note. Research from iShares indicates four drawdowns exceeding 50% since 2014, with the three largest averaging around an 80% decline, and recoveries took nearly three years in three out of four instances.

The disparity between “one year later” and “experiencing it” is where much confidence is tested. Currently, that test involves new infrastructure, spot ETFs, interest rate expectations, the dollar, and options hedging, all observable in real time.

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The minus 50% threshold feels like a commitment, and it is nearby

Using the last peak above $126,000 as the benchmark, the levels fall into familiar ranges. Minus 50% is approximately $63,000, minus 60% is around $50,000, and minus 70% is about $38,000. With Bitcoin near $68,000, the first threshold is just a few thousand dollars away.

This closeness transforms a figure into a strategy. Some individuals begin accumulating cash, anticipating the tag. Others purchase early to avoid missing out. Some hesitate when it finally arrives, as the downward movement feels more pronounced than the chart appeared on their display.

The meme serves as a psychological mechanism because it condenses chaos into a straightforward trigger.

The lived experience expands again the moment the trigger is activated, and the drawdown continues to evolve. The iShares drawdown history is significant here, as it highlights a deeper reality: many “winning” entries still involved prolonged periods of uncertainty, and occasionally a much steeper decline, before recovery occurred.

Achieving success with Bitcoin is not merely about buying Bitcoin early. Anyone who has been involved for over a decade has at least one anecdote about a time they sold too soon. I certainly do. I have a 7-figure HDMI cable lying around somewhere that I purchased using Dogecoin in 2014.

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ETFs have transformed the dip into a daily metric

Spot Bitcoin ETFs have introduced a scoreboard that everyone can monitor daily. As of market close on Feb. 13, US spot Bitcoin ETFs held approximately 1.265 million BTC, with assets under management around $87 billion.

This scale alters how drawdowns propagate through the market. A substantial wrapper can support price during stable periods, and it can also intensify selling pressure when flows turn negative, as the shift becomes visible, quantifiable, and easy to track.

There have been approximately 55,665 BTC in net outflows over the past 30 days, representing a multi-billion dollar shift at current prices. Such a drain can maintain price pressure even when social media remains filled with “buy zone” optimism.

It also provides dip buyers with a new confirmation mechanism, flow stabilization, as capitulation often manifests as outflows slowing, leveling off, and eventually reversing.

Rates and inflation influence the opportunity cost

A significant portion of Bitcoin’s next chapter hinges on macroeconomic factors that may seem unexciting: yields, inflation figures, and how investors assess risk across the board.

The Federal Reserve maintained its target range at 3.50% to 3.75% in late January. Inflation has also been declining, with US inflation at 2.4% in January, a data point that fuels expectations for rate cuts and shifts in risk appetite.

Cross-market proxies assist in framing that sentiment. The S&P 500 proxy SPY provides insight into overall risk appetite, long-duration Treasuries via TLT reflect the interest rate environment, and gold through GLD captures the defensive interest.

When those markets lean towards safety and yield, Bitcoin drawdowns often feel more pronounced, and when the sentiment shifts towards easing conditions, dip buying tends to find more support.

Options markets are indicating a broad range

The viral table appears calm on the page, while the options market typically communicates in broader ranges. On Unusual Whales, Bitcoin options indicate an implied move of about 6.66% into Feb. 20, with implied volatility around 0.5656.

High implied moves influence behavior in clear ways. Dip buyers seek clean levels and quick confirmation. Hedgers remain active when uncertainty remains high.

Short-term fluctuations become part of the baseline, which can transform the minus 50% threshold into a waypoint rather than a bottom.

This connects back to the long drawdown record from iShares, as significant recoveries often came with complicated paths and extended timelines.

A drawdown strategy thrives or fails based on whether the buyer can manage the journey, not just the destination.

Three scenarios for the next chapter, with levels to monitor

The most straightforward way to frame the near term is as conditional scenarios, each linked to signals anyone can observe.

  1. In a grinding base case, Bitcoin maintains the low to mid $60,000s, the market fluctuates, ETF outflows slow towards flat, and volatility decreases. The flow tape becomes the indicator here, as diminishing 30-day outflows typically signal waning sell pressure.
  2. In a liquidity-friendly scenario, inflation continues to decline, expectations for rate cuts solidify, and risk appetite improves across markets. ETF flows turn positive and remain positive, which could pull Bitcoin back towards previous highs.
  3. In a deeper capitulation scenario, outflows persist, macro conditions turn risk-off, and Bitcoin drops below the minus-50% line towards the $50,000 range, with pressure that may extend to deeper drawdown levels.

The buy zone meme presents a straightforward narrative, and the market provides conditions. The practical version of this chart exists alongside the real-time scoreboard, the ETF flow tape, the rates backdrop, and the uncertainty gauge.

This represents the genuine human-interest aspect of this cycle: the emotional desire for a clear guideline and the institutional mechanics that now influence how that guideline unfolds in real time.

Strategic dollar cost averaging and market timing

Historically, this phase of the cycle is an excellent opportunity to purchase Bitcoin. However, as I have mentioned multiple times in my analysis over the past eight months, “this time is different.”

We can legitimately question the four-year cycle theory; we have 6% of the supply held by US ETF funds, and corporate treasuries have surged.

This is not the same Bitcoin market as in 2012, 2016, 2020, or even 2024.

Personally, I am too emotional a trader, so I ceased attempting to time the market years ago.

One approach that mitigates the risks associated with trying to time the market is strategic DCA.

You buy BTC daily, but send slightly more BTC to exchanges than the daily purchase. This leaves a surplus of cash that accumulates over time. Then, when Bitcoin drops to a price that appears attractive, you have funds available to buy the dip. You have already allocated those funds to Bitcoin; you just haven’t executed the purchase until a dip occurs. This way, you benefit from DCA smoothing, enhanced by larger allocations during drawdowns.

Historically, Bitcoin rarely remains below a previous cycle’s all-time high for an extended period. At $68,000, we are right on target for 2021. In 2022, Bitcoin dipped below the 2017 all-time high for about 30 days before beginning its three-year ascent to $126,000.

history (Source: Bitbo)

Once again, none of this is intended to serve as individual investment advice, and there are risks associated with any investment. However, this article addresses some considerations Bitcoin investors should take into account when determining when, if, and how to increase their Bitcoin allocations in their portfolios, in my view.

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