Bitcoin’s current 47% daily close drawdown remains moderate compared to prior cycles, where declines exceeded 80%–90%. Historical data suggests bear markets have become progressively less severe over time.Despite renewed claims that “Bitcoin is dead,” the magnitude of the present correction remains well below previous bear market extremes.47% Drawdown vs. 90% in 2012Bitcoin is currently down approximately 47% from its recent peak on a daily closing basis.For context:2012 bear market: Over 90% drawdown2014–2015 cycle: Roughly 85% decline2018 bear market: Around 84% drop2022 cycle: Approximately 77% correctionThe record remains the early 2012 cycle, when Bitcoin experienced a drawdown exceeding 90%, a collapse that would likely trigger unprecedented market panic if repeated today.Bear Markets Are Gradually ModeratingLong-term cycle analysis shows a structural pattern:Each major bear market has produced a smaller percentage drawdownVolatility has gradually declinedInstitutional participation has increasedMarket liquidity has deepenedThis suggests Bitcoin’s market structure is maturing, even though corrections remain sharp by traditional asset standards.What If the Pattern Continues?If historical moderation persists, a typical cyclical bottom could imply a 60%–70% drawdown rather than the extreme 80%–90% collapses seen in earlier years.That would mean:Additional downside risk cannot be ruled outCurrent levels may not necessarily mark a cycle lowHowever, comparisons to early-cycle crashes may be exaggeratedInvestor Psychology vs. Historical ContextEven at a 47% decline, some market participants are declaring the end of Bitcoin.Yet historically:Corrections of this magnitude have occurred within both bull and bear cyclesExtreme pessimism has often accompanied medium-term bottomsMedia narratives tend to intensify during volatility spikesThe key distinction today is structural evolution. Bitcoin now trades alongside equities, ETFs, derivatives markets, and institutional capital flows — dynamics that did not exist in earlier cycles.Bottom LineA 47% drawdown is severe by traditional financial standards, but historically moderate by Bitcoin’s own track record.If the long-term pattern of diminishing drawdowns continues, a 60%–70% cycle correction would remain within historical norms — while still far less dramatic than the 90% collapse seen in 2012.Whether the current move marks consolidation or the midpoint of a deeper correction will likely depend on macro liquidity conditions, ETF flows, and broader risk appetite.