¿Por qué el pico de 126,000 dólares de Bitcoin no fue el punto más alto del ciclo?

Generado por agente de IACarina RivasRevisado porAInvest News Editorial Team
sábado, 10 de enero de 2026, 6:22 am ET2 min de lectura

Bitcoin's $126,000 peak in October 2025 marked a moment of euphoria, but its subsequent retreat to the $85,000–$87,000 range by mid-November sparked debates about whether the asset had reached its cyclical apex. A deeper analysis of macroeconomic indicators and on-chain metrics, however, suggests that the $126K level was not the definitive top of the cycle. Instead, the interplay between the U.S. business cycle-particularly the divergent trajectories of the manufacturing and services sectors-and Bitcoin's on-chain recovery signals points to a more nuanced narrative.

Business Cycle Alignment: Divergent Sectors and Late-Stage Dynamics

The U.S. business cycle in late 2025 revealed a stark divergence between the manufacturing and services sectors. The ISM US Manufacturing PMI fell to 47.9 in December 2025, the lowest since October 2024, signaling a prolonged contraction driven by declining production and inventories

. Capacity utilization in manufacturing, while rising to 82.4% from 79.2% in May 2025, remained below historical averages, indicating .

In contrast, the Services PMI remained in expansion territory, with a December 2025 reading of 54.4 and a robust October 2025 reading of 52.4-

. Positive indicators included a Business Activity Index of 54.3 and a New Orders Index of 56.2, the latter being . However, the sector faced headwinds, including a 48.2% Employment Index (contraction for the fifth consecutive month) and a Prices Index of 70% (highest since October 2022), .

This divergence highlights a late-stage business cycle dynamic: while manufacturing struggles reflect broader economic fragility, the services sector's resilience-driven by consumer demand and institutional adoption-suggests that the macroeconomic environment remains supportive of Bitcoin's long-term trajectory. The ISM Supply Chain Planning Forecast further reinforces this,

in manufacturing for 2026, with acceleration expected in the second half of the year.

On-Chain Recovery Signals: A Market Resetting for Renewal

Bitcoin's on-chain data post-peak reveals a market in the early stages of recovery. By December 2025, the Realized Profit (7D-SMA) metric had plummeted to $183.8M per day from over $1B per day,

. This decline coincided with a resurgence in US spot ETF flows, which began reaccumulating as prices stabilized near the $80k support zone, .

Structural strength also emerged from long-term holders, who continued to accumulate despite the volatility. The Short-Term Holder Cost Basis at $99,100 became a critical threshold for recovery, with its sustained reclaim

. Meanwhile, the MVRV (Market Value to Realized Value) ratio for short-term holders stood at 0.95, -a bearish signal if prices remain capped below $99,100.

Systemic leverage metrics further supported a late-cycle reset. The leverage ratio (open interest relative to market cap) for Bitcoin dropped to 3.4%,

, suggesting reduced overextension. Additionally, the network hash rate declined by 4% in late December 2025- -historically associated with improved forward returns.

Synthesis: A Cyclical Floor, Not a Cap

The alignment of macroeconomic and on-chain data paints a picture of a market resetting rather than collapsing. While the services sector's inflationary pressures and employment challenges pose risks, its expansionary momentum-coupled with manufacturing's projected 2026 recovery-creates a favorable backdrop for Bitcoin. On-chain metrics, including reduced profit-taking pressure, institutional re-entry via ETFs, and a hash rate contraction,

that the $126K peak was a late-cycle overextension rather than a terminal top.

However, overhead supply from buyers who accumulated near cycle highs ($92.1k–$117.4k) remains a near-term obstacle.

of the $99.1k Short-Term Holder Cost Basis would be critical to unlocking a more constructive trend.

Conclusion: Positioning for 2026

Bitcoin's $126K peak in October 2025 was a product of speculative fervor, not fundamental exhaustion. The U.S. business cycle's mixed signals-manufacturing contraction offset by services sector resilience-and Bitcoin's on-chain recovery dynamics suggest that the asset is entering a phase of consolidation. For investors, this implies that the current price action represents a cyclical floor rather than a capitulation. As the ISM Supply Chain Planning Forecast anticipates manufacturing recovery in 2026 and on-chain metrics indicate a reset in market structure, the stage is set for a potential reacceleration in Bitcoin's price trend.

author avatar
Carina Rivas

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