Bitcoin hits Power Law level low that historically precedes a rebound The power law model shows BTC trading at one of its deepest discounts relative to trend, a level previously seen during the March 2020 crash and FTX collapse.
What to know: – Bitcoin’s decline below $66,000 has pushed it to the lower boundary of the Power Law corridor, a long-term valuation model that has contained price action for more than a decade. – The Power Law Oscillator has fallen to 4.4%, indicating that bitcoin is priced cheaper than 95.6% of historical readings relative to its long-term trend. – Trading at that level has often preceded a rebound
After briefly falling below $66,000 on Wednesday, bitcoin The model, popularized by physicist Giovanni Santostasi and refined by Porkopolis Economics, plots bitcoin’s price against time on a logarithmic scale and suggests that growth slows naturally as the network matures. It has tracked bitcoin’s price trajectory for more than a decade. Unlike traditional cycle-based models that focus on the rate at which new bitcoin is created — it’s cut by 50% roughly every four years — the Power Law argues that bitcoin follows a long-term mathematical trend similar to patterns observed in nature, where growth decelerates over time.
According to checkonchain data, the Power Law Oscillator shows that when measured against the model, bitcoin has been more expensive than it is today for roughly 95.6% of its trading history. Previous visits to these levels have coincided with periods of extreme market stress, including the March 2020 pandemic-driven selloff and the collapse of crypto exchange FTX in November 2022. Both events pushed bitcoin toward the lower edge of the model before significant recoveries followed.