A potential finale Bitcoin sell-off is back in the picture after market analyst Aaron Dishner warned that the asset appears structurally close to the capitulation. Based on the cycle timing, historical declines and converging technical signals, he argues that the market may be approaching its final downward move before a bottom is forming in the longer term. He urges investors to brace for volatility as this “down year” unfolds.
Bitcoin’s previous fractal points to another flush
Dishner’s framework focuses on a structural comparison to May 2022. Op the weekly BTC/USDT charthe outlines a sequence that reflects previous bear market endings: a major high, a liquidation-related declinea failed aid rally that formed a bear flag, and a collapse to new lows. After that breakdown, price typically moves sideways before a latest aggressive sell-off.
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He expects a downside target of around $35,000-$40,000, which aligns with historical declines of 70% to 75% from record highs. Previous cycles support this range: the 2013-2015 decline lasted about 59 weeks with an 87% decline; the 2017-2018 cycle spanned about a year with an 84% decline; and the 2021-2022 bear phase saw a recovery of approximately 77% in 54 weeks. Based on this pattern, he expects the current cycle to continue for at least 52 weeks from the peak, causing a potential bottom around October 2026.
Moreover, the weekly RSI has reached deep oversold arealevels historically associated with capitulation events like late 2018 and the COVID crash. Although the RSI is not yet at its most extreme historical lows, it is within the zone that previously preceded major downsides and sharp sell-offs.
Volume statistics also show a deterioration. Volume on the major exchanges reflects a sustained distribution, resembling conditions before the lows of previous cycles. The broader conclusion is that price structure, momentum and volume are converging towards what Dishner describes as a ‘final flush’.
Stablecoin dominance and S&P risk are increasing the pressure
Dishner also emphasizes combined stablecoin dominancespecifically USDT and USDC. Historically, sharp increases in stablecoin dominance have coincided with heavy Bitcoin sell-offs. He notes that dominance is approaching resistance at almost 13%, and that previous breakout clusters preceded steep downside moves in BTC.
The RSI behavior on the dominance chart reflects the pre-capitulation setups from 2022. In that cycle, a spike in dominance corresponded to Bitcoin’s decline in June, followed by weeks of choppy consolidation before recovery efforts.
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Macro risk strengthens the outlook. Dishner points to bearish divergence signals on the S&P 500, pointing to clusters of downside momentum warnings seen near previous stock tops. An 8% pullback is considered plausible, while a deeper correction of 20%-25% represents a high-impact scenario. According to him, a significant drop in stock prices would put stress on digital assets, increasing pressure on margins thus accelerating Bitcoin’s decline.
Even after the capitulation, history suggests that the market may not reverse immediately. Previous cycles required 19 to 40 weeks of sideways or unstable price action before a sustained recovery began.
If the pattern holds, Bitcoin may enter its pattern final sell-out phaseand may reach a low point around October. Until then, Dishner maintains that conditions remain structurally bearish, with increased risk in crypto and traditional markets.
Featured image created with Dall.E, chart from Tradingview.com
