A new chart shared on X highlights Bitcoin’s growing resilience: each bear market bottom since 2015 has been higher than the previous cycle, underscoring the asset’s structural uptrend despite recurring volatility.
From just $185 in 2015, Bitcoin’s lowest annual prices have climbed steadily, hitting $3,200 in 2018, $5,000 in 2020, and $16,400 in 2023. In 2024, the floor rose further to $38,500, and in 2025, the lowest recorded level reached an impressive $75,000.
This pattern of progressively higher lows suggests that Bitcoin’s long-term demand and adoption are strengthening, even as the market experiences periodic corrections.

Volatility Masks Underlying Growth
While short-term traders focus on price swings, analysts point out that Bitcoin’s consistent base growth reflects expanding institutional participation, broader retail adoption, and the emergence of new financial instruments such as ETFs and tokenized reserves.
The trend reinforces Bitcoin’s position as a maturing asset class, less prone to collapse during downturns and increasingly viewed as a macro hedge in the global financial system.
If this structural trajectory continues, Bitcoin’s next market cycle could establish a new “floor” well above the current one, a testament to how each downturn ultimately strengthens its long-term foundation.


