February 14 News, Bitcoin (BTC) has currently fallen about 50% from its all-time high, and the market is once again focusing on a core question: how long will this correction take to recover? Crypto market analyst Sam Daodu stated that by reviewing past cycles, we can find relatively clear time references.
Daodu pointed out that since 2011, Bitcoin has experienced over 20 deep corrections exceeding 40%. Mid-cycle declines of 35% to 50% are typically used to release overheated sentiment and do not alter the long-term upward structure. In the absence of systemic shocks, prices generally return to previous highs within about 14 months.
He compared the current environment to 2022. That year, Bitcoin was impacted by multiple structural events such as Federal Reserve tightening, the Terra ecosystem collapse, and FTX bankruptcy, causing its price to fall from $69,000 in November 2021 to $15,500 at the end of 2022, a decline of about 77%. Ultimately, it took 28 months for the price to break above the old high in March 2024. At that time, long-term holders controlled about 60% of the circulating supply, absorbing a large amount of forced sell-off supply.
The liquidity crisis triggered by the 2020 pandemic was even faster. Bitcoin dropped from about $9,100 in March 2020 to $3,800, a 58% retracement, and within six weeks, it rebounded to $10,000. Nine months later, it returned to the 2017 high of $20,000, and then surged to $69,000 in November 2021.
The 2018 bear market was an extreme case. Bitcoin fell from $20,000 to $3,200, an 84% retracement. The bursting of the ICO bubble, regulatory pressures, and capital outflows caused market activity to plummet, and returning to previous highs took nearly three years.
Daodu summarized that the depth of the correction determines the pace of recovery: declines of 40%–50% usually take 9–14 months to recover, while drops exceeding 80% often require three years or more. Whether the current situation evolves into a long-term downturn still depends on changes in global liquidity and investor risk appetite.
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