Bitcoin (BTC) Price: JPMorgan Analysts Signal Crypto Sell-Off Approaching Its Final Chapter
Wall Street's crystal ball just flashed a buy signal for Bitcoin.
JPMorgan analysts are making waves with a bold call: the brutal crypto sell-off is running out of steam. Their analysis suggests the bottom is near—a potential inflection point that could mark the end of the capitulation phase and the beginning of a new accumulation cycle for patient investors.
The Contrarian Indicator
When traditional finance giants start whispering about crypto bottoms, it's time to pay attention. Their models point to exhaustion in selling pressure, with derivative markets and on-chain metrics aligning to paint a picture of extreme fear—historically a reliable precursor to recovery. It's the classic 'blood in the streets' signal, only this time it's being broadcast from a mahogany-paneled trading desk.
What Comes Next?
Don't expect a vertical moonshot. The path forward likely involves a grinding stabilization, a period where weak hands finish exiting and long-term conviction rebuilds. Infrastructure—exchanges, custody, regulatory clarity—will solidify during this phase, laying the groundwork for the next leg up. The smart money isn't chasing pumps; it's quietly positioning for the next macro cycle.
One cynical finance jab? Nothing gets a banker bullish on an asset like the chance to buy it at a steep discount after they've called it a 'fraud' for years. The bottom might be near, but the irony is already here.
TLDR
- Bitcoin rejected at $93,000 for the third time, pulling back to weekly lows near $89,250
- Open interest climbed as BTC dipped to $90,000, indicating short positions are building up
- US Bitcoin ETFs recorded three-day outflow streak totaling $934.8 million through Thursday
- JPMorgan analysts suggest crypto sell-off may be nearing a bottom as January ETF outflows ease
- Strong passive bids around $90,000 could trigger a short squeeze if support level holds
Bitcoin started 2026 with an 8% surge to $93,000 but faced rejection at this resistance level for the third consecutive time. The cryptocurrency pulled back to weekly lows near $89,250 as traders reassessed their positions.

The current price action shows BTC testing a key order block between $89,200 and $90,500. This range represents the first area where bulls could attempt fresh long entries if momentum turns positive.
Bitcoin continues to hold above the monthly rolling volume-weighted average price, which turned bullish at the start of 2026. This technical indicator provides some support for the current price level.
Short Squeeze Setup Developing
Open interest data reveals an interesting pattern as Bitcoin dipped from $92,000 to $90,000. Open interest climbed sharply during this decline, indicating that short positions are accumulating.
If bitcoin can defend the $90,000 level, a short squeeze becomes likely. A strong daily close above $91,700 would signal the first confirmation of this scenario.
This could be a possible scenario for $BTC.
I still think Bitcoin will hit $98,000-$100,000 before any major downtrend. pic.twitter.com/IsNLnKAh44
— Ted (@TedPillows) January 8, 2026
However, failure to hold above $89,000 WOULD expose internal liquidity from $86,000 to $87,000. This would give sellers a clear downside target.
Order book data from CoinGlass shows strong passive bids around $90,000. Over the past two weeks, similar bid absorption has preceded short-term recoveries.

ETF Flows Show Mixed Signals
US Bitcoin ETFs recorded $205.5 million in outflows on Thursday, marking a three-day streak. The cumulative net outflow reached $934.8 million over this period.
On Jan. 8 (ET), spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded net outflows of $399 million, spot ethereum ETFs saw net outflows of $159 million, while spot Solana ETFs posted net inflows of $13.64 million and spot XRP ETFs recorded net inflows of $8.72 million. https://t.co/YcNXWVZGwE pic.twitter.com/P1m7as9Z8d
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) January 9, 2026
Despite recent outflows, the seven-day net FLOW remains positive at $240.7 million. Year-to-date, Bitcoin ETFs have logged net inflows of $439 million according to SoSoValue data.
Sean Dawson from Derive cited several factors driving the outflows. These include capital reallocation after year-end, Bitcoin’s failure to break $92,000 resistance, and increased macroeconomic uncertainty.
The start-of-year rally pushed Bitcoin above $94,000 into a zone where recent buyers have their cost basis clustered between $92,100 and $117,400. Glassnode analysts note this creates breakeven sell-side pressure.
JPMorgan analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou expressed Optimism in a January 7 report. They stated that signs of bottoming out are visible in crypto indicators including perpetual futures and CME futures position proxies.
The banking giant believes retail and institutional investors completed most of their planned trimming during the fourth quarter of 2025. JPMorgan suggested the recent crypto sell-off could be nearing a bottom.
Bitcoin is currently trading around $91,100, with year-to-date gains standing at approximately 4 percent.