Bitcoin may not be finished unwinding leveraged positions following last week’s steep sell-off, with some analysts cautioning that the market could still push prices into the $70,000–$80,000 range before stabilizing. The warning comes after Bitcoin shed more than $24,000 in ten days, dropping to a seven-month low of roughly $82,000 on Nov. 21.
Crypto market analyst James Check described the downturn as a “2-sigma long liquidation event,” a statistically large move characterized by mass liquidations of leveraged long positions. While much of the excessive leverage has already been flushed out, Check said markets often “sniff out the final hold-outs,” indicating that a deeper downturn cannot be ruled out.
A 2-sigma event reflects a shift two standard deviations from the mean—a rare but impactful movement in financial markets. Such volatility is not uncommon in crypto, where high leverage amplifies both rallies and declines.
Signs of Stabilization Emerging
Despite the sharp correction, some analysts believe Bitcoin may have found a short-term bottom. According to Augustine Fan, head of insights at crypto trading platform SignalPlus, sentiment and technical indicators suggest the market may be oversold.
Fan pointed to extreme readings on tools such as Bollinger Bands, noting that absent unexpected shocks—such as forced selling from large entities—the recent lows could hold in the near term.
Additional factors supporting the stabilization thesis include:
- Oversold market conditions across major technical indicators
- Cooling derivatives activity following the liquidation cascade
- Reduced funding rates signaling lower speculative positioning
These elements have historically preceded short-term recoveries, though analysts caution that macro conditions and institutional flows remain critical variables.
Whale Selling Limits Rebound Potential

On-chain data also indicates that institutional investors remain cautious. Analysts at CryptoQuant reported that recent price action reflects “institutional redistribution” and structural market weakness, even as early signals point to a potential local bottom.
CryptoQuant analyst Carmelo Alemán noted that the 1,000–10,000 BTC whale cohort—a group that often influences broader market direction—continues to offload holdings. Persistent selling from this segment prevents analysts from confirming a full trend reversal.
Key trends highlighted include:
- Whale distribution continuing despite stabilization
- Weak structural demand among large holders
- A rebound driven primarily by retail and smaller institutional flows
Until whale behavior shifts, analysts warn that upward momentum could remain limited, leaving Bitcoin vulnerable to another leverage-driven dip.


