Bitcoin has logged eight straight days of gains, a rare streak that has historically coincided with continued gains.
The ascent began on March 9, when bitcoin was trading around $68,000, and since then it has inched higher each day (UTC) to hit highs above $75,000 early Tuesday, according to CoinDesk data. This rally has also coincided with heightened geopolitical tensions following the escalation of conflict in the Middle East at the end of February, during which bitcoin has emerged as one of the best performing major assets.
Historically, there have been fifteen instances where bitcoin has produced at least eight consecutive days of gains. In the 30 days following those streaks, bitcoin was higher nine times and lower six times, suggesting a modest bullish bias but far from certainty.
The median return over those 30 day periods is approximately +19%, highlighting that when momentum does continue, the upside can be significant, according to Glassnode data.
For additional context, the longest streak of consecutive daily gains remains twelve days, recorded during the 2017 bull market. There have also been several occurrences of ten day winning streaks, underlining just how unusual the current run is.
What next?
While the winning streak highlights strong short-term momentum, it’s worth nothing that this year, just as 2022, falls within the historically bearish phase of bitcoin’s four-year mining reward halving cycle, and caution may be warranted before expecting further gains.
Moreover, similar winning streaks have occurred during bear markets, and they have often preceded deeper declines. For instance, in 2022, bitcoin recorded an eight day winning streak in March. However, that rally proved to be a temporary rebound within a broader downtrend, with prices falling around 30% over the following 30 days.
There are increasing comparisons being drawn between the current 2026 cycle and the 2022 cycle. Both periods sit in the contraction stage of bitcoin’s four year halving cycle, a structural pattern driven by the programmed reduction in mining rewards approximately every four years.
Historically, bitcoin has dropped 70% or more during bear markets. The ongoing bearish trend that kicked off in October has seen prices fall 50% from the record high of over $126,000.
If that’s not enough, Strategy (MSTR), the largest publicly traded holder of bitcoin, is currently following a price trajectory similar to 2022, according to Checkonchain data.
Taken together, these things call for cautious optimism and rather than blind confidence.

