What The Bitcoin Transaction Volume Crashing Could Do To The Price
Alex Smith
4 weeks ago
Bitcoinâs transaction volume is falling alongside its price. At first glance, that sounds bearish because weak activity is usually a result of weak demand, lower participation, and a lack of momentum. However, technical analysis shows the historical pattern conveys a more complicated story.
Technical analysis from CryptoCon shows Bitcoinâs transaction volume strength falling close to the green low-volume band that indicated previous cycle bottoms. The falling transaction volume is also a good thing for traders looking for the cycle bottom.
Bitcoin Transaction Volume Falling Into Bottoming Zone
Technical analysis of Bitcoinâs volume shows that the transaction volume strength indicator, which tracks the relative weight of Bitcoinâs on-chain transaction activity against its price history, is compressing toward the low-volume zone that has reliably marked the end of bear markets.
As shown in the green band at the bottom of the chart below, which is labeled as the low transaction volume area, prior crosses into this region were followed closely by important bottoms in 2015, 2018, and 2022.
That is why the current decline in transaction volume cannot be read only as a negative signal. Heavy transaction activity often appears closer to cycle tops, when the market is crowded. Examples of these are shown in the chart below in 2017, 2021, and 2025. Low transaction volume, on the other hand, tends to appear when interest has faded, which is a good sign.
However, according to crypto analyst CryptoCon, Bitcoin is not quite in cycle bottom territory, and the difference does matter. In 2014, it spent 10 months at these same levels in the channel. The issue is that âcloseâ is not the same as âconfirmed.â Bitcoin may be entering the part of the cycle where sellers are getting tired, but the data does not yet show the kind of final reset in previous long-term bottoms.
What This Could Do To The Bitcoin Price
The immediate implication is that the Bitcoin price may stay vulnerable in the short term. There are also other data points converging in that direction, but they have not yet aligned. For instance, the MVRV Z-Score, a metric that has always marked cycle tops and bottoms, shows that the bottom is not in yet.
When the price is falling, and transaction volume is also shrinking, it often shows that buyers are not yet stepping in with enough force to reverse the trend. This lines up with recent market developments, with Bitcoin down by 3.7% in the past 24 hours and trading at $74,520 at the time of writing.
First, the Bitcoin price may continue to lower or remain under pressure. Then, once transaction volume reaches the deeper low-volume band and stays there long enough to confirm exhaustion, the setup could begin to look more like a cycle bottom within one month.
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