While Bitcoin price is falling to multi-month lows, crypto exchange Gemini’s Co-Founder Cameron Winklevoss declared the current Bitcoin plunge a “final opportunity” for investors. He is urging people to buy Bitcoin before its price surge renounces above $90,000 levels.
The cryptocurrency, which peaked above $126,000 in October, has now erased all its gains for the year, shrinking to as low as $89,426 late Monday and hovering just above $90,000 early Tuesday. Winklevoss’s post on X struck a defiant tone against the prevailing bearish sentiment, positioning the dip as a classic entry point in Bitcoin’s volatile history.
“This is it—the last time you’ll be able to buy Bitcoin below $90k,” Winklevoss wrote, echoing the hype cycles that have defined crypto’s booms and busts. His message comes as the asset’s trading volume exceeds $100 billion, signaling heightened activity even as prices slide. For long-time advocates like the Winklevoss twins, who have championed Bitcoin since its early days, such pullbacks are not red flags but “fire sales” for the digitally savvy.
At the time of publishing, Bitcoin is trading at $91,178 with a 24 hour trading volume of $121 billion—as per CoinMarketCap data.
Why is Bitcoin price crashing?
Bitcoin’s descent into negative territory this month (November 2025)—down nearly 30% from its October all-time high—has blindsided even optimistic traders, wiping out roughly $600 billion in market value over the past month. The slide accelerated over the weekend after the leading crypto asset failed to reclaim the critical $92,000 support level, flipping it into resistance and triggering a cascade of stop-loss orders.
The 1-week chart shows that BTC is currently hovering around its major support level, trading closely above 100EMA, which has been constantly managed since late 2023. The RSI (Relative Strength Index) sits at 53, which suggests the market sentiment as moderately bullish.

The cascade in Bitcoin price comes after the loosening market momentum following the flash crash on October 10, triggered by the U.S. President Donald Trump’s renewed trade war rhetoric against China, set the stage for this month’s rout, eroding investor confidence in risk assets. Fading expectations for aggressive Federal Reserve rate cuts have further soured the mood, with a persistent “risk-off” tone gripping global markets.
Analysts point to macroeconomic drags—like delayed liquidity injections and heightened volatility—as key culprits, with Bitcoin now testing levels not seen since April.
Industry voices split: Buy the dip or brace for more pain?
Winklevoss isn’t alone in seeing silver linings. A chorus of crypto influencers and executives echoed his bullish stance on X, framing the turmoil as a strategic accumulation phase. “The crypto market is clearly under heavy pressure, but this isn’t the end of a cycle,” said Lawrence Samantha, CEO of NOBI, to The CryptoTimes. “I believe it’s the kind of moment that usually creates new opportunities.”
Strategy’s Michael Saylor, a perennial Bitcoin maximalist, has long advocated dollar-cost averaging through volatility, though he remained mum on specifics this week. Meanwhile, Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood, known for her long-term optimism, hinted at renewed inflows into spot Bitcoin ETFs as a stabilizing force, per recent filings.
“Short-term sentiment indeed can swing violently, but the industry’s foundations still haven’t changed with adoption keeps rising, infrastructure now stronger than ever, and innovation doesn’t stop just because prices pull back,” Samantha added.
Though not all views are rosy. Some leaders urge caution, warning against “catching a falling knife.” Forbes contributor Billy Barton issued a stark “$1 trillion crypto crash warning,” citing Fed hawkishness as a potential accelerant for further declines. Economic Times experts predict Bitcoin could breach $90,000 by month’s end if volatility spikes, with altcoins like Ethereum and Solana facing steeper drops.
Outlook: Bottom in sight or deeper waters ahead?
As Bitcoin dominance slips from 61% to 58.8%—potentially signaling a rotation to altcoins—the market teeters on a knife’s edge. Optimists like Winklevoss bet on a swift rebound, fueled by institutional demand and year-end rallies, while bears eye sub-$85,000 wicks as a real possibility. With U.S. liquidity injections on the horizon and Trump’s pro-crypto policies still in play, the dip could indeed prove fleeting.
“Crashes like this shake out speculators more than builders. So my focus stays the same: who keeps building, improving products, and solving real problems while the market is ‘bleeding’? Those are the ones who usually lead the next leg up,” Samantha emphasized.
For now, the crypto faithful are divided: a frenzy of “buy the dip” memes clashes with capitulation fears. In Bitcoin’s world, where fortunes flip overnight, one thing remains certain—volatility is the only constant. Investors, take note: the truck may be backing up, but timing the load is everything.
Also read: Mt. Gox Moves $936M in BTC as Repayment Deadline Extends to 2026
