Here's why bitcoin's parabolic era may be over
Bitcoin’s price retraces to old highs, signaling slower growth and a maturing market.
By Omkar Godbole|Edited by Sam ReynoldsUpdated Apr 1, 2026, 9:50 a.m. Published Apr 1, 2026, 9:32 a.m. Make preferred on
What to know:
- Bitcoin’s current bear market has pulled prices back to about $70,000, revisiting the prior cycle’s record high and breaking from earlier patterns in which past peaks were rarely retested.
- Each successive bull run has produced smaller percentage gains, reflecting the law of diminishing returns as higher prices demand far more capital to push bitcoin to new highs.
- Traders’ anchoring to the $70,000 level may help determine whether this bear phase is nearing an end.
Since its inception, bitcoin BTC$68,622.64 has been like a daredevil climber scaling new heights, rarely looking back at the ledges it left behind. Its price seldom retraced to previous bull-market peaks, even during long, grueling bear markets.
But that pattern seems to have changed, suggesting that the market has matured, and the era of runaway, parabolic gains is behind us.
BTC trades near old peak
Bitcoin has been hovering around $70,000 since early February – well below the $126,000 peak of the 2023-2025 bull run.
That $70,000 mark is important because it was the record high in the 2019–2022 market cycle. In other words, this bear market has retraced all the way back to a previous summit.
This is unusual. In earlier bear markets, such as those in 2014 and 2018, bitcoin never returned to prior cycle highs. The exception was 2022, when prices dipped under the 2017 high of $20,000. At the time, analysts dismissed it as an anomaly, blaming crypto scams and massive deleveraging.
What makes the current retrace remarkable is that it’s happening without any extreme catalysts. The market has simply returned to a prior peak as part of the natural ebb of a bear cycle.

Slowing growth and the law of diminishing returns
Each new bull run isn’t generating the parabolic gains of the past. Pushing prices far beyond previous peaks is getting harder, which makes retraces to old highs more natural. In other words, previous peaks are no longer untouchable.
This is a clear example of the law of diminishing returns. As bitcoin becomes more expensive, moving prices higher requires ever-larger sums of capital. The days when modest inflows could trigger massive rallies are largely behind us, making price movements more measured and predictable.
Looking at historical growth highlights this trend:
- The 2013 peak was 38 times higher than 2011.
- The 2017 peak was 16 times higher than 2013.
- By 2021, the increase slowed to just 3 times the 2017 level.
- The 2025 peak of over $126K was less than twice the 2021 peak.
While prices are still rising, the pace of growth is steadily slowing.
Institutionalization and broader market participation
Part of this slowdown comes from the institutionalization of Bitcoin and the growth of the derivatives market. Traders now have structured ways to bet on volatility, timing, and market direction, not just price increases. This broader participation has tempered extreme swings.
This is very different from the pre-2020 era, when trading was largely limited to buying and selling on the spot market. Back then, only bullish believers of bitcoin actively participated, often jumping in at the first sign of a dip.
Behavioral patterns and what’s next
Old peaks often act as strong support levels due to a behavioral concept called anchoring bias, where traders fixate on previous highs as reference points.
Many who missed the initial breakout tend to buy when prices return to these familiar levels, fueling the next leg of a bull run. This behavioral tendency, combined with the self-reinforcing nature of support and resistance, helps explain why the recent downtrend has stalled around $70,000.
A strong bounce from this level could signal that the bear market has run its course, similar to late 2022, when the downtrend ended around $20,000.
However, if the law of diminishing returns is any guide, the next uptrend may be more measured and “tradfi-like,” rather than the frenzied rallies of the old speculative days.
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