During this period of opening market software, a very obvious change can be felt—the market is no longer so noisy.



Looking at the Fear and Greed Index, the data has been stuck at 23 (extreme fear zone) for two consecutive weeks. Throughout December, it has hardly moved away from low sentiment levels. It may seem like a bad sign, but what we really need to pay attention to is not the fear itself.

Where is the problem? The market has started to become indifferent to declines.

This signal is very important—it usually does not mean that the trend is ending, but rather that a structural shift is often imminent.

**The market has experienced a rare "polarization"**

Regarding the outlook for 2026, there is a serious divergence of opinions.

The optimistic side's argument is quite solid: PlanC points out that Bitcoin has never experienced two consecutive years of annual declines in history. Since 2025 is already under pressure, 2026 is more likely to enter a recovery or even reversal cycle. Moreover, from a structural perspective, the entry of ETFs has changed the long-term demand curve for Bitcoin. This kind of correction does not fundamentally mean a trend reversal.

Bitwise's CIO Matt Hougan also shares a similar view, focusing on the long-term structural changes brought by ETFs.

But the pessimists are not without basis. Veteran trader Peter Brandt believes that 2026 could be a long period of "using time to gain space," a prolonged downturn. Fidelity Global Macro Head Jurrien Timmer directly pointed out that there is a realistic possibility that Bitcoin could fall back to $60,000–$65,000.

Here is a detail worth pondering—although the bearish judgment is pessimistic, it at least has specific price expectations. The very existence of this divergence precisely indicates that the market is at a structural adjustment node.
BTC0,28%
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ThreeHornBlastsvip
· 16h ago
When the market doesn't care, it's actually the most dangerous. True shakeouts often happen quietly and silently.
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MagicBeanvip
· 16h ago
It doesn't matter anymore; this is the most dangerous signal.
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DogeBachelorvip
· 16h ago
I'm really at a loss, the market this time is truly "lying flat," even the panic seems a bit powerless. The polarization was actually long overdue; optimists and bears each have their reasons, and we retail investors are just gambling in the middle. If Bitcoin really drops back to 60-65K, that would be so uncomfortable... But on the other hand, maybe this is the calm before the bottom. This point is indeed interesting, but the key still depends on who will actually take over later. Waiting for 2026, anyway, I'm already numb.
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StablecoinSkepticvip
· 16h ago
The market's silence is actually more frightening; this is true manipulation. Really? The feeling of indifference is the most dangerous signal. Polarization indicates that no one truly understands the future direction; I will just observe quietly. PlanC's logic sounds good, but history never repeats itself, brother. I remain skeptical about the ETF demand curve theory; where the capital flows are heading is the real key. I'm confident in the 60,000 to 65,000 range; who says it's impossible? Indifference in market sentiment is actually accumulation of chips; the on-chain data is still worth watching. Both sides have valid points, indicating a deep adjustment is underway; absolutely no rushing. The market is starting to fake dead, which usually means a major event is about to happen. The greater the divergence, the closer the explosion point; history has shown us this.
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MevTearsvip
· 16h ago
The market becoming numb is actually not a bad signal. The more I think about this logic, the more it hits home. Both sides have valid points, and that's the most terrifying part, indicating that the bottom hasn't been reached yet. The 65,000 level sounds a bit scary, but if it really drops to that point, could it be an opportunity to buy in? An indifferent attitude is the most dangerous; many people get trapped this way. This disagreement shows that the market is hesitating. Hesitation is usually the calm before a turnaround. Watch how the ETF big players move; their real actions are much more reliable than these analyses. Has there never been a two-year consecutive decline? It feels like this time is truly different. The bearish price expectations are actually clearer than the optimistic ones—ironic, isn't it?
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