Bitcoin sentiment has entered deep bearish territory, mirroring conditions last seen during the November sell-off, even as prices try to stabilize after a sharp decline in late January.
Social data shows that negative comments are overtaking positive posts for the first time in almost two months. The trend reflects growing pessimism among retail traders following Bitcoin’s steep decline.
The shift also comes after BTC roughly fell 16% since January 28briefly touching a layer close by $74,500 before it rebounds.
Price action over the past 48 hours indicates a tentative stabilization. Bitcoin has since recovered to approx $78,700which amounts to a daily profit of just over 2%. However, it remains well below the psychological level of $80,000 that previously served as short-term support.
Oversold conditions appear on the daily Bitcoin chart
Technical indicators underline the severity of the recent sell-off. Bitcoin’s 14-day RSI has fallen to around 29putting it firmly in oversold territory and close to levels that have historically coincided with short-term relief rallies.
Trading volume also increased during the decline direction $74.5Kindicating a burst of capitulation-style selling rather than a slow decline.

Source: TradingView
However, repeat purchases remain limited, with the price struggling to regain broken support zones in between $80,000 and $85,000.
From a structural perspective, Bitcoin continues to print lower highs and lower lows on the daily time frame.
While the rebound from $74.5K alleviates immediate downward pressure, it has yet to negate the broader corrective trend that began after January’s highs.
Fear dominates sentiment as retail takes a step back
The rise in bearish social commentary reflects growing caution among retail participants, many of whom appear to have reduced exposure during the sell-off.
Similar sentiment Extremes were recorded during the recession in November. These periods were followed by short-lived upswings rather than immediate trend reversals.

Source: Santiment
This difference between rising prices and deteriorating sentiment highlights a familiar market dynamic: emotional capitulation often occurs around local lows. At the same time, conviction will only return when the price structure improves.
For now, Bitcoin’s rebound appears corrective rather than decisive. A sustainable recovery would likely require regaining the $80,000-$85,000 zone. At the same time, failure to hold above $74,500 would reopen downside risk towards deeper support levels.
Final thoughts
- Bitcoin sentiment has reached levels consistent with capitulation, but the price structure has yet to confirm a broader trend reversal.
- The recovery to $74.5K eases short-term pressure, although regaining key resistance remains critical to recovery.
