Marketdash

Bitcoin Just Triggered a Pattern That Previously Led to 126% Average Gains

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Bitcoin has fallen 7.5% since Christmas Eve 2024, marking only the fourth time in 12 years this has happened. The previous three instances were followed by explosive rallies averaging 126% the next year.

Bitcoin (BTC) is down 7.5% since Christmas Eve 2024, and if history is any guide, that's actually good news. This decline marks the fourth time in 12 years that Bitcoin has fallen year-over-year on Christmas Eve. The previous three times? Each one preceded massive rallies.

When Bitcoin Stumbles at Christmas, It Tends to Roar Back

The pattern is remarkably consistent. Bitcoin has declined year-over-year on Christmas Eve exactly three times since 2013: in 2014, 2018, and 2022. Each instance was followed by explosive returns.

In 2014, Bitcoin fell 51.4% to $323. The following year brought a 40.9% rally. In 2018, the cryptocurrency crashed 70.8% to $4,079, then surged 79.4% in 2019. Most recently, in 2022, Bitcoin collapsed 66.9% to $16,822 before roaring back with a stunning 159.8% gain in 2023.

The average tells the story: Bitcoin fell 63% on those three Christmas Eves, then gained 126.4% the following year.

This Year Looks Familiar

The 2025 setup mirrors those previous down years. Bitcoin opened near $94,120, rallied to an intraday peak exceeding $126,000 in October, then gave back those gains dramatically. As of Dec. 24, 2025, it trades around $87,000, down 6.8% year-to-date and nearly 30% below its 2025 peak.

Making matters worse, Bitcoin is experiencing one of its weakest fourth quarters on record, down more than 22% since Oct. 1. Tax-loss harvesting and thin holiday liquidity have trapped the cryptocurrency in a narrow $86,700-$88,200 range.

What the Numbers Suggest for 2026

If Bitcoin follows the precedent established in 2014-2015, 2018-2019, and 2022-2023, the math points to substantial upside. Based on the average 126.4% return following prior down Christmas Eve years, potential 2026 targets include:

  • Conservative case: $125,000-$150,000 (43%-72% upside)
  • Base case: $150,000-$175,000 (72%-101% upside)
  • Bull case: $175,000-$200,000+ (101%-129%+ upside)

Market analysts are aligned with these projections. Fundstrat's Tom Lee maintains a $200,000 Bitcoin target for early 2026. Grayscale Investments expects institutional inflows could produce an all-time high in the first half of 2026. Bitwise Asset Management predicts Bitcoin will break its four-year cycle and set new highs in 2026.

The Catalysts Are Already in Place

Several factors support the possibility of history repeating itself. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have pulled in over $132 billion since launch, fundamentally transforming the investment landscape. Corporate digital asset treasuries accumulated 42,000 BTC in their largest addition since July, pushing aggregate holdings above 1 million BTC.

The macroeconomic environment may also cooperate. The Federal Reserve could face pressure to cut interest rates as unemployment rises to 4.6%, its highest level since 2021. Bitcoin typically benefits when rates decline.

Additionally, the federal government established a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve earlier this year, with government-held bitcoin estimated at $15-$20 billion.

VanEck analysts noted another contrarian indicator: falling hash rates, down 4% in December marking the sharpest decline since April 2024. Historically, periods of declining network power often precede positive 90-180-day forward returns.

Whether this Christmas Eve decline leads to another explosive rally remains to be seen, but the historical playbook suggests Bitcoin investors might want to pay attention.

Bitcoin Just Triggered a Pattern That Previously Led to 126% Average Gains

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Bitcoin has fallen 7.5% since Christmas Eve 2024, marking only the fourth time in 12 years this has happened. The previous three instances were followed by explosive rallies averaging 126% the next year.

Bitcoin (BTC) is down 7.5% since Christmas Eve 2024, and if history is any guide, that's actually good news. This decline marks the fourth time in 12 years that Bitcoin has fallen year-over-year on Christmas Eve. The previous three times? Each one preceded massive rallies.

When Bitcoin Stumbles at Christmas, It Tends to Roar Back

The pattern is remarkably consistent. Bitcoin has declined year-over-year on Christmas Eve exactly three times since 2013: in 2014, 2018, and 2022. Each instance was followed by explosive returns.

In 2014, Bitcoin fell 51.4% to $323. The following year brought a 40.9% rally. In 2018, the cryptocurrency crashed 70.8% to $4,079, then surged 79.4% in 2019. Most recently, in 2022, Bitcoin collapsed 66.9% to $16,822 before roaring back with a stunning 159.8% gain in 2023.

The average tells the story: Bitcoin fell 63% on those three Christmas Eves, then gained 126.4% the following year.

This Year Looks Familiar

The 2025 setup mirrors those previous down years. Bitcoin opened near $94,120, rallied to an intraday peak exceeding $126,000 in October, then gave back those gains dramatically. As of Dec. 24, 2025, it trades around $87,000, down 6.8% year-to-date and nearly 30% below its 2025 peak.

Making matters worse, Bitcoin is experiencing one of its weakest fourth quarters on record, down more than 22% since Oct. 1. Tax-loss harvesting and thin holiday liquidity have trapped the cryptocurrency in a narrow $86,700-$88,200 range.

What the Numbers Suggest for 2026

If Bitcoin follows the precedent established in 2014-2015, 2018-2019, and 2022-2023, the math points to substantial upside. Based on the average 126.4% return following prior down Christmas Eve years, potential 2026 targets include:

  • Conservative case: $125,000-$150,000 (43%-72% upside)
  • Base case: $150,000-$175,000 (72%-101% upside)
  • Bull case: $175,000-$200,000+ (101%-129%+ upside)

Market analysts are aligned with these projections. Fundstrat's Tom Lee maintains a $200,000 Bitcoin target for early 2026. Grayscale Investments expects institutional inflows could produce an all-time high in the first half of 2026. Bitwise Asset Management predicts Bitcoin will break its four-year cycle and set new highs in 2026.

The Catalysts Are Already in Place

Several factors support the possibility of history repeating itself. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have pulled in over $132 billion since launch, fundamentally transforming the investment landscape. Corporate digital asset treasuries accumulated 42,000 BTC in their largest addition since July, pushing aggregate holdings above 1 million BTC.

The macroeconomic environment may also cooperate. The Federal Reserve could face pressure to cut interest rates as unemployment rises to 4.6%, its highest level since 2021. Bitcoin typically benefits when rates decline.

Additionally, the federal government established a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve earlier this year, with government-held bitcoin estimated at $15-$20 billion.

VanEck analysts noted another contrarian indicator: falling hash rates, down 4% in December marking the sharpest decline since April 2024. Historically, periods of declining network power often precede positive 90-180-day forward returns.

Whether this Christmas Eve decline leads to another explosive rally remains to be seen, but the historical playbook suggests Bitcoin investors might want to pay attention.