The end of September is roughly two weeks away, but the Bitcoin market is already showing signs of stabilizing. Bitcoin (BTC) has rebounded from its recent lows and reclaimed levels that now serve as a base of support.
Analysts at the crypto exchange Bitfinex disclosed in this weeks Alpha report that market conditions are aligning for a renewed push once Septembers negative seasonality comes to an end. The rebound is also evident in the total crypto market cap, which has increased 4.8% this week to well over $ trillion, adding $180 billion.
According to Bitfinex, BTC closed the past week at a 4.2% increase, breaking a three-week downtrend. The asset has reclaimed the $112,500 level after defending the lower end of a key support zone near $107,500. At the time of writing, the cryptocurrency was worth $115,550, representing a 2.2% increase over the last seven days.
With BTC reclaiming and holding its current levels, they now serve as support for a technical backdrop that could strengthen recovery into the fourth quarter. This dynamic aligns with Bitfinexs prediction that the market correction is nearing completion in the short term.
It is worth mentioning that bitcoins rebound was supported by on-chain buy pressure and a structure that reflected the buy-the-dip strategy among investors. This is evident in the Cost Basis Distribution (CBD) metric, which tracks the concentration of supply across acquisition levels.
As bitcoins momentum faded after reaching its current all-time high (ATH), the asset fell below the cost basis of recent top buyers and plummeted into the $108,000 – $116,000 air gap. Now that BTC is recovering and supply is redistributing, it has gradually filled the gap. The asset now trades at the upper edge of the range, near $116,000, which remains a resistance level until it is reclaimed.
If BTC makes a sustained move above $116,000, it will likely witness a more meaningful recovery.
While the market awaits the next move, experts have analyzed how different Bitcoin investor cohorts behaved during the rebound from $108,000 to $114,000.
Long-term holders remained steady and bought the dip, while short-term holders were the primary source of selling pressure. The three-to six-month cohort locked in roughly $189 million in daily profits on a 14-day moving average basis. This represented about 78% of all short-term holder profits within that time frame.