Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) briefly sank below $60,000 on June 5 as the crypto market entered extreme fear territory. Strategy, formerly known as MicroStrategy and a major corporate buyer of the coin, just made its first net sale of coins since 2022.
If you’re reaching for the sell button, you have plenty of company at the moment. But in terms of Bitcoin’s seasonality, its performance in July has had a couple of wrinkles that might shift your reading of the present moment.
Will AI create the world’s first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an “Indispensable Monopoly” providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »
Let’s take a look at the data.
What July has brought in the past
Across the 13 Julys since 2013, Bitcoin has closed green in nine of them, with an average gain of 7.6% and a median gain of 8.2%. In the highly disrupted market conditions of July 2020, it actually ripped 24% higher.
The more interesting observation is what tends to happen when Bitcoin limps into July after a punishing stretch, as it has since its last all-time high in October 2025. In every prior instance of consecutive down months heading into July, the coin grew substantially by July’s end. While there’s no guarantee it will do the same thing this time around, if June continues the downtrend, the data suggest it would then lead to a strong bounce in July.
In other words, the current backdrop fits the pattern so far. May closed down nearly 3.4%, June is on pace to be far worse, and spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) outflows have run 13 straight sessions.
This information isn’t a permission slip for short-term thinking
Don’t bet the farm on Bitcoin recovering in July just because the data suggest it’s likely. This coin should be held for very long periods to capture its value from scarcity, not flipped in short windows. At most, consider adding to your position with a tad more capital than you normally would.
But things could be different this time. The market’s structure has changed substantially since the launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs in 2024, leading to greater institutional access to the asset. Furthermore, the macro backdrop, including the Federal Reserve’s posture, the ongoing capital rotation toward artificial intelligence (AI) equities, and the still-boiling Middle East tensions, may not cooperate with what investors would prefer.
What seasonality can do is recalibrate investor psychology around moments like this one. Google searches for “Bitcoin is dead” have spiked to multiyear highs, and similar peaks have historically been great times to buy.