Reading Bitcoin's Tea Leaves
Bitcoin has been stuck in what traders call "choppy consolidation" for months now. After getting smacked down from all-time highs in October, it's been ping-ponging around the $80k to $95k range. Nothing exciting, just sideways grinding that tests your patience.
But here's what's interesting: after finding support near $80k a few weeks back, Bitcoin hasn't collapsed lower. Instead, it's been quietly building a pattern of higher lows and higher highs. That's textbook bullish price action, even if it doesn't feel dramatic in the moment.
Sure, there's no obvious catalyst screaming "Bitcoin moon mission" right now, especially with equities pulling back from their own highs. But Bitcoin has a track record of acting as a forward indicator for risk appetite. When it stabilizes and pushes higher, stocks often follow. The recent rally of roughly $3k following Venezuela stabilization pushed Bitcoin back above $95k, which raises the odds that equities could make new highs too. The beauty of it? Bitcoin doesn't even need to hit fresh all-time highs for stocks to do their thing. History backs that up.
Commodities and the Missing Santa Rally
Zooming out to the broader asset landscape, gold, silver, and other metals have been ripping higher. As long as those rallies stabilize instead of reversing violently, capital can rotate back into equities and support another leg up.
Then there's this weird seasonal quirk: we just closed out three consecutive years without a Santa rally. That's never happened before. Does it mean anything by itself? Probably not. But the first five trading days of January often give us a decent read on momentum for the year ahead. If markets show some muscle through the early part of this week, it could set a constructive tone for 2026.
Flashback to 2025 for context: January weakness gave way to February highs, then we got slammed with a sharp 23% drawdown into April. We're not expecting that exact playbook to repeat. The current administration has backed off some of the policies that rattled markets earlier and seems more focused on rate cuts and potentially shaking up Fed leadership.
The 2026 View: Optimistic but Realistic
So where does that leave us? We're optimistic about 2026, but let's be honest about what optimism looks like in modern markets. A 10-15% correction that gets bought quickly feels very possible, maybe around April or May. That's a rough guess, not a prediction carved in stone, but it fits the rhythm of how markets move now.
Here's the thing: markets today absorb information instantly, prices adjust in milliseconds, and algorithms pile in aggressively on both sides. The result is faster, sharper moves in both directions. But we believe the era of 50-70% drawdowns in the S&P 500 is largely behind us. Over the past century, markets have compounded at nearly 10% annually, and that trend should hold as long as technology keeps advancing.
And technology doesn't grow in a straight line. It grows exponentially, which supports higher long-term returns alongside those quick, brutal pullbacks. This is just how the system works now. Too many powerful interests are tied to market stability for prolonged collapses to become the norm. That's why staying fully invested makes sense.
If you focus on high-quality businesses with real cash flow, consistent shareholder returns, and strong secular tailwinds, the long-term outcomes tend to work themselves out. There's still plenty of opportunity in the short term too, and staying active where it makes sense remains the play. For ongoing market updates, follow @WOLF_Financial.




