Willy Woo’s main point is straightforward: Bitcoin’s move off the lows does not yet qualify as a trend reversal. In his liquidity-based framework, the market is still in the middle phase of a bear cycle, where rebounds can be sharp but fail without renewed long-term capital. That matters more than the bounce itself, especially with Bitcoin still down about 46.82% from its October 2025 peak near $126,000 and trading around $67,000 in early March 2026.
What changed, and why Woo still calls it a bull trap
Bitcoin recovered from roughly $59,000 to as high as $74,000, which is enough to create reversal narratives. But Woo’s read is that the move stalled where it needed to prove itself. The market failed to hold the mid-$70,000s, and that failure matters because bear-market rallies often break resistance briefly, attract fresh buyers, and then fade when deeper liquidity does not follow.
His three-phase model places Bitcoin in the middle stage of the bear market rather than near the end of it. In this phase, liquidity weakens, rallies become less durable, and price can move sideways for extended periods while repeatedly testing resistance. Woo’s warning is not just that downside remains possible, but that the recent rebound is being misread as confirmation when the underlying capital profile still looks incomplete.
Why liquidity matters more than price alone in this setup
Woo’s framework is built around who is providing capital and how durable that capital is. Investor flows have improved since mid-February, which explains why Bitcoin was able to rebound. But he argues that the improvement is not strong enough, or long-term enough, to mark a bottom. A market can rise on short-covering, tactical buying, or temporary risk appetite without actually exiting a bear phase.
The distinction is important for crypto market structure. In a genuine transition toward a bottom, long-duration capital starts to return in a sustained way, often through institutional channels or investors willing to absorb supply over time. Without that, price strength remains vulnerable to another leg down. On Woo’s model, the final bear-market phase has not started yet, and a cycle low near $45,000 later in 2026 remains plausible.
What on-chain and sentiment data are saying about the current rally
Supporting data points line up more with continuation of the correction than with a clean recovery. Santiment shows retail buyers accumulating below $70,000 while whales are selling aggressively. That split usually matters more than retail enthusiasm because larger holders can keep adding supply into rebounds, limiting follow-through and delaying any durable base.
Sentiment gauges also remain defensive. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index has moved back to extreme fear, and CryptoQuant’s Bull Score is still deeply bearish. Those indicators do not guarantee lower prices by themselves, but they do fit Woo’s argument that the market has not repaired enough internally to treat the recent move as the end of the bear market.
| Signal | What it shows now | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Price rebound | Recovery from about $59,000 to $74,000, then failure to hold higher levels | Suggests a tradable bounce, not yet a confirmed structural reversal |
| Investor flows | Improved since mid-February | Helpful, but still too weak to confirm a durable bottom |
| Retail vs. whales | Retail accumulating below $70,000 while whales sell | Points to ongoing distribution rather than completed capitulation |
| Fear and Greed Index | Back in extreme fear | Shows market confidence has not normalized |
| CryptoQuant Bull Score | Deeply bearish | Confirms weak internal conditions despite the rebound |
The signals that could challenge the bear-market view
Not every metric is uniformly negative. Measures such as Entity-Adjusted Liveliness and the MVRV Z-Score suggest some accumulation and more attractive valuations than at the top. That can support tactical buying interest, and it helps explain why Bitcoin has not simply collapsed in a straight line.
But those indicators are not enough on their own. Cheap relative valuation and selective accumulation can appear well before a final bottom. Woo’s distinction is that discounted conditions are not the same as a completed bear market. Until those early signs are matched by sustained long-term capital inflows, they remain counterpoints, not a full invalidation of the bull-trap thesis.
What to watch next: the real checkpoint for a bottom
The next useful checkpoint is not a single green week or another fast move higher. It is whether long-term capital returns in a way that changes the market’s absorption capacity. That includes stronger institutional participation, more durable investor inflows, and a shift away from whale-led selling into broader accumulation that can hold through volatility.
ETF and institutional flow data matter here because they can show whether capital is becoming stickier. Recent spot Bitcoin ETF outflows argue the opposite for now. Macro liquidity and equity-market weakness also remain relevant because Bitcoin tends to react quickly when risk capital leaves the system. If those conditions improve while long-term inflows strengthen, the market can start transitioning toward the final bear-market phase. Until then, Woo’s framework says the safer interpretation is that this rebound is still a bear-market rally, not the all-clear.


