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It's the million-dollar question: When is the right time to buy Bitcoin (or any other coin for that matter)?
It’s the million-dollar question: Is now a good time to The phrase "buy the dip" might be useful here. It doesn’t mean stacking guacamole in your trolley. It means buying Bitcoin when the price is lower than it has been before, working on the hope that the price might go up again. Does buying the dip work? It depends on a few things.
Cryptocurrency markets are notoriously volatile, but they also exhibit cyclical patterns. Bitcoin has historically gone through boom-and-bust cycles roughly every four years, often tied to its .
For instance, before the 2020 halving, Bitcoin to around US$5,200 before surging to nearly $69,000 by November 2021.
Investors who bought before halving, essentially “buying the dip”, saw good returns. Similarly, after peaking in 2021, Bitcoin fell to around $16,800 in late 2022. Those who bought that dip saw prices climb back toward $30,000 by mid-2023.
These cycles demonstrate that dips can be temporary setbacks in a broader upward trajectory, particularly for established assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum. It’s important to note though that there is often a significant amount of time between dip and peak, so if you’re looking for short-term gains, this may not always be the right strategy for you.
Markets, including crypto, often exhibit mean reversion. This is a tendency for prices to return to an average or trend line after extreme movements.
When crypto prices tumble, it’s typically driven by panic selling, regulatory news, or macroeconomic shocks (e.g., interest rate hikes).
However, once the fear subsides, fundamentals like growing adoption or institutional investment tend to reassert themselves. This could bring prices back up. Or, of course, it might not.
This reflects a key psychological truth. Fear-driven sell-offs often overshoot, creating undervalued entry points for savvy investors.
Ethereum tells a similar story to Bitcoin. After from $1,160 at the start of 2018, to $86 later that year, it rebounded to over $4,700 by 2021.
Investors who bought the 2018 dip multiplied their investment in just three years. While past performance isn’t a guaranteed predictor of future success, the consistency across multiple cycles suggests that dips can sometimes be opportunities in disguise.
Another proof point lies in the behaviour of large players. On-chain data frequently shows “whales” (holders of massive crypto wallets) and institutions accumulating during dips. For example, during the 2022 bear market, firms like MicroStrategy continued at prices below $20,000.
This buying behaviour signals that these large companies think that prices will recover.
Crypto’s value proposition, that of decentralisation, limited supply, and increasing uses, gives people buying the dip confidence that the price trajectory will keep going up.
Bitcoin’s capped supply of 21 million coins, for instance, contrasts with fiat currencies prone to inflation. As adoption grows (via things like payment systems adopting it, use in DeFi or ETFs), demand could outpace supply over time, driving prices higher. Dips, then, could possibly be short-term noise in a long-term signal of growth.
Buying the dip isn’t foolproof. The biggest “BUT” in this whole idea is that no one truly knows when dips will arrive and when the price will hit the deepest part of the dip. And of course, not every crypto price recovers. Altcoins with weak fundamentals often fade into obscurity after a dip.
Another risk is that prolonged bear markets can test patience, making investors want to sell out for good and find new investments.
The dip-buying strategy probably works best with a long-term horizon and a focus on fundamentally strong projects.
Dips often mark the best entry points for outsized returns. The hard bit is knowing when the dips won’t go any deeper. In a market known for volatility, some investors see temporary declines as opportunities and buy, while others give up, sell, and cry. See you at the next bull run!
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