If FTX is sparking new Bitcoin (BTC) bear market lows, BTC price action has further to fall to match Mt. Gox.
Data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode confirms that the “Mt. Gox bear market” almost a decade ago still beats the 2022 lows.
With the fallout from the FTX bankruptcy scandal still unfolding, questions remain over how many major crypto entities will be affected and how big industry losses will be.
BTC/USD fell over 25% last week as the ramifications became known and has failed to recover much lost ground.
At the same time, multiple comparisons to Mt. Gox have emerged: alleged mismanagement, poor security and insider trading activity have all been cited as examples.
The raw data, however, reveals some interesting additional numbers to bear in mind.
Mt. Gox imploded as a result of a giant 840,000 BTC hack in February 2014. Just months before, Bitcoin had seen a fresh all-time high of around $1,100, with Mt. Gox handling around 70% of all trading activity.
In the months that followed, Bitcoin lost up to 85% of its value versus that high, bottoming out in January 2015 — almost a year after the hack.
This cycle became the first Bitcoin bear market witnessed on a wide scale by hodlers, and it took until December 2017 for another all-time high to emerge.
Fast forward to 2022, and at its recent two-year lows, BTC/USD was down 77% in just under a year against its latest all-time highs of $69,000.
With the timeframes similar between FTX and Mt. Gox, the question facing analysts is whether BTC price action will add another 10% to its drawdown versus its prior peak — or worse.
As Cointelegraph reported, calls for a return to $10,000 were already in place even before the FTX episode. The black swan bankruptcy, others warned, has,
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