What’s Next After Red October?

What’s Next After Red October?

What’s Next After Red October?

Bitcoin is heading into November after its first negative October performance in six years, leaving investors wondering if the historic downturn signals a deeper bear trend or a healthy reset before the next leg up.

Bitcoin is down 1.4% over 24 hours and trading around $107,000, contributing to a 2.2% drop in the total crypto market cap to $3.64 trillion, per CoinGecko data. 

The sell-off triggered over $1.16 billion in long liquidations on November 3, underscoring the intensity of the recent leverage unwind.

The month’s “Red October” occurred against a complex macroeconomic backdrop, including Federal Reserve Chair Powell’s announcement of the end of quantitative tightening and rate cuts, followed by comments that tempered expectations for a December rate cut.

The uncertainty around macroeconomic policy has pressured risk assets, with Bitcoin’s U.S.-session returns cooling significantly from 0.94% on October 29 to -4.56% over the past week, according to Velo data.

Geopolitical tensions have notably eased following the Trump-Xi agreement that de-escalated the trade war. The temporary pause averts threatened 100% tariffs and extends a delicate truce between the world’s two largest economies.

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“So could this red October actually set up the next major leg of Bitcoin’s bull cycle? I think that’s entirely possible,” Rachel Lin, CEO of SynFutures, told Decrypt. “Corrections like this tend to be the midpoint of a broader cycle rather than the end.”

Historical data support the optimistic interpretation, with Bitcoin’s mean return for the third quarter remaining positive at 6.05%. 

It’s also worth noting that November has historically been one of Bitcoin’s strongest months, posting a mean return of 42% over the past 12 years.

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“For November, I expect a period of stabilization and cautious optimism,” Lin said. “Bitcoin may trade sideways early in the month as markets absorb Fed commentary, but a decisive shift in tone could trigger a recovery.”

The expert maintains that if Bitcoin continues following its typical post-halving pattern, “a move toward $120,000 to $150,000 by the end of 2025 remains within reach,” citing strong underlying fundamentals from ETF flows to institutional custody solutions.

Bitcoin is likely to continue a “range-higher” trajectory, Decrypt was previously told. The bullish case is also supported by strong on-chain data showing that long-term structural demand remains intact despite short-term weakness.

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