3 Reasons Why I’m Not Worried About Bitcoin Slipping Below $90,000

3 Reasons Why I’m Not Worried About Bitcoin Slipping Below ,000


  • Bitcoin’s price is currently below $90,000.

  • After it marked a mediocre 2025, Bitcoin falling below that price level is scaring some investors.

  • This is a case where it pays to focus even more on the long term than usual.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Bitcoin ›

Investing for the long term is, in large part, the art of not confusing any individual signpost for the contour of the landscape itself. On that note, a lot of investors are fretting that Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) has fallen below $90,000 after a weak 2025.

But I’m still accumulating it, and I’m not worried at all about this asset. Here are three reasons why.

A large golden Bitcoin logo standing on top of a pile of stacked coins.
Image source: Getty Images.

The first reason I’m not concerned about Bitcoin falling below $90,000 is that I plan on holding it for years, no matter what its price does in any given month. Turbulence along the way is to be expected.

For instance, Bitcoin closed at $16,646 on Dec. 17, 2022, which was approximately the nadir of the last big crypto bear market. Even after the coin’s lackluster performance in 2025, today it’s up by 428% compared to three years ago. Worrying about what it did over the last few months is a surefire way to erode your conviction and eventually set yourself up to sell your Bitcoin when it’d probably be better to just hold it. Price drops are just theoretical losses until you actually sell and lock in the lower prices forever.

The mechanism that makes holding this asset for the long term so appealing is the halving cycle. With each halving that passes, approximately once every four years, it gets dramatically harder to mine Bitcoin. That means that future buyers will be competing over a smaller pool of new supply, which tends to bias prices to the upside.

Another reason to stay calm right now is that Bitcoin’s supply increasingly lives on the balance sheets of owners whose incentives lean toward holding it rather than selling.

Government entities, public companies, asset managers, and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) today account for just over 4 million BTC out of the asset’s total possible circulating supply of 21 million BTC. Big holders can still sell if certain contingencies compel them to, but they are typically far less skittish than marginally attached retail investors looking for a quick crypto flip. If financial institutions or even central banks start to accumulate the coin to hold as reserves, it’ll mark another completed expansion phase of Bitcoin’s maturity as an asset, and that’s likely right around the corner.


finance.yahoo.com
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