According to Cointelegraph, Bitcoin (BTC) is poised to close the year 2025 in the red unless it can achieve a 6.24% increase above its yearly opening price of approximately $93,374. This marks a significant moment for Bitcoin, as it would be the first post-halving year to end negatively if the cryptocurrency fails to recover in the remaining days of the year. Nic Puckrin highlighted the urgency, noting that Bitcoin has only three days to reverse its fortunes and close the year positively.
Bitcoin reached an all-time high of over $125,000 in October, but a subsequent market crash severely impacted its rally, causing a widespread decline in cryptocurrency prices. Since then, Bitcoin's price has dropped by about 30%, hitting a local bottom around $80,000 in November. This downturn has sparked debates among analysts regarding the potential end of Bitcoin's bull rally and the onset of a new bear market. The uncertainty surrounding Bitcoin's future is compounded by differing opinions among market analysts, who are divided on whether a recovery is imminent or if the decline will persist into 2026. They often cite macroeconomic factors and liquidity conditions as key drivers of Bitcoin's price movements.
The focus is now on the U.S. Federal Reserve and its interest rate policies, which play a crucial role in shaping market dynamics. Bitcoin has been trading below its 365-day moving average since November, breaking the structural uptrend that began in 2023. Lower interest rates generally serve as positive catalysts for risk-on assets like cryptocurrencies, which tend to rally with fresh liquidity injections. In 2025, the Federal Reserve implemented three 25 basis point interest rate cuts, yet Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell provided mixed guidance at the December Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. Powell's remarks have cast doubt on the likelihood of another interest rate cut at the upcoming FOMC meeting in January, with only 18.8% of investors anticipating such a move, according to the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) Group’s FedWatch tool.