As following I make a little experiment about the fifth halving cycle effect on BTC prices.
We know the nine previous time series on halving cycle highs and lows: 26, 2, 1132, 165, 19345, 3233, 67549, 15760, 124749 (USD/BTC). Taking into account the regularities of these past nine data points, the tenth data point (the BTC price lowest level during the fifth halving cycle) will be ca 30000-40000.
I consider the BTC halving cycle effect on prices valid if I am able to remarkably (at least by 20%) increase my initial bet (0.01 BTC). I sold my 0.01 BTC today for 814.40 USD and plan to buy it back near the cycle low.
The experiment begins on May 10, 2026 and will end on December 31, 2027.
Four-year cycles – the very name – actually come from the four-year halving periods. It's just that no one remembers about it anymore. Now everyone thinks they're some magical four-year trading cycles.
The larger the halving, the more it impacted the price. When the block reward decreased from 50 BTC to 25 BTC, it was a big jump. The same thing happened with the halving from 25 BTC to 12.5 BTC. With subsequent halvings, the impact on the price was smaller, but then the cryptocurrencies themselves began to become more popular, and hence the bull markets were bigger, but not directly from the four-year halvings themselves.
At this point, the halving has almost no impact on the price, so we can completely forget about four-year cycles.
The cryptocurrency market is becoming increasingly aligned with traditional markets, and this will continue as financial institutions create new instruments based on cryptocurrencies and with further regulations introduced by governments.
I'm sorry, but your experiment won't work. Unless someone tries to force themselves to find similarities.
Anyway, if you want to play along, go ahead - it's your time.
