- The death cross might signal a trend shift, but a bounce first is still expected
- Whales are split: early-cycle holders selling while institutions accumulate
- Extreme fear + looming global liquidity make this moment more complex than a simple top-signal
Bitcoin’s been drifting downhill pretty hard since that death cross flashed last week, and JRNY doesn’t pretend it’s nothing. Still, he keeps reminding people that even ugly technical signals usually get a relief pop before the market decides where it actually wants to go. He puts it pretty bluntly: even if this is the start of a bear market, the first big dump almost always gets a bounce. The range he’s eyeing for that short-term rebound is somewhere around 92K–98K, probably within a week or two. After that, he says the real direction—continuation or collapse—starts showing its hand a little clearer.

Whales Are Doing Opposite Things, Which Makes the Market Weird
Things get stranger when you look at whale behavior. A Satoshi Era wallet—yeah, one of those ancient ones—sold 11,000 BTC after holding since 2011. JRNY called it “pretty worrisome,” mostly because that timing doesn’t feel random. But almost immediately after, another whale scooped up over 20,000 BTC in just 48 hours, almost flipping the sentiment back the other way. Add MicroStrategy buying another 8,000+ BTC, plus miners stacking ETH even while sitting on unrealized losses, and the whole picture shifts. Retail panic is dumping coins out of fear, while long-term players are quietly averaging in like nothing’s changed. It’s like two different markets happening at once.

No Cycle Model Really Explains What’s Happening
This is one of those strange moments where the experts can’t even agree with themselves. Tom Lee thinks ETH’s bottoming out right now. Arthur Hayes believes the entire cycle might stretch until 2027 or even 2028 because of all the fresh liquidity coming. Then you’ve got the classic four-year-cycle crowd saying the peak already passed, so this is just the natural downturn. JRNY shrugs it off, reminding everyone that nobody batting 100% exists. If someone really had the future mapped out, they wouldn’t be tweeting threads about it at 2 a.m. Different narratives can all be partially right, and that’s the messy truth.
Liquidity Could Become the Real Market Driver
Instead of staring at charts all day, he zooms out to the global macro picture. The U.S. is cooking up new stimulus. Japan just dropped a $110B package. China’s injecting over a trillion. Canada’s back to QE. Global M2 is ripping higher. It’s not a “guaranteed bull market signal,” but historically big liquidity waves have a way of pushing money toward risk assets eventually. Even though fear is maxed out right now, that doesn’t erase the fact that oceans of new capital tend to seep into crypto in time. It just might not happen the exact second people want it to.

Don’t Let Panic Control Long-Term Plans
To wrap it up, JRNY points out something kind of wild: about 95% of all BTC bought in the past 155 days is underwater. That’s the same condition seen near major cycle bottoms before. He nudges viewers toward dollar-cost averaging during oversold stretches instead of doom-selling. Some of the worst Q4s ever have been followed by monster rebounds not long after. His main idea is pretty simple: panic selling usually locks in losses and chasing green candles usually locks in regret. Slow, structured accumulation over years tends to beat emotional decision-making almost every time.











