After experiencing a turbulent November that saw a 23% decline in the large-cap crypto index, Bitcoin has started to climb back from the depths. The world’s largest cryptocurrency hit an all-time high of $95,508.31 on November 16, 2025, before retreating below $90,000 by month’s end. Not exactly the smooth ride investors were hoping for.
Bitcoin’s volatile month sparked heated debates. Buy the dip? Or run for the hills? The answer might lie in history. November is typically bullish for Bitcoin, with a median price gain of 8.81%. This year broke the pattern. Spectacularly.
History shows November loves Bitcoin. This year? It spectacularly ditched the script.
Institutional players aren’t flinching, though. Firms like MicroStrategy and BlackRock kept accumulating through the volatility. The GENIUS Act brought regulatory clarity that’s been sorely missing. Long-term, these developments matter more than short-term price swings. Bitcoin’s becoming a strategic allocation, not just a gamble.
Macro trends still favor crypto. A weaker dollar and accommodative Fed policies create the perfect storm for alternative assets. Bitcoin’s competing with gold now. Not exactly your grandpa’s financial system anymore.
Technical indicators suggest a floor around $90,540.20, with potential upside to $144,450.48. The Fear & Greed Index sits at a pathetic 25 – “Extreme Fear.” Historically, that’s when smart money starts buying.
On-chain activity tells a nuanced story. Yes, some long-term holders (7+ years) are selling. But this pattern matches 2024 and wasn’t cause for panic then. Supply dynamics post-halving remain bullish. Analyst projections remain optimistic with price targets of $120,000-$250,000 for the period between 2025-2030.
Looking ahead to December, forecasts suggest a modest 0.54% increase. Bitcoin’s market dominance of approximately 62.7% and $2.28 trillion market capitalization as of September 2025 underscores its resilience despite recent volatility. But if historical patterns hold, Q4 could finish strong. The quarter has averaged a whopping 77% return over Bitcoin’s history, with a median return of 47%.
Will Bitcoin recover? The market had just 13 green days out of 30 in November. Current market sentiment shows only 27% bullish investors, indicating extreme pessimism that often precedes recoveries. But previous bull markets saw 50% drawdowns before reaching new heights. This pullback? Normal bitcoin behavior. Crazy for everything else.