TL;DR
Bitcoin began trading close to $107,000 in September, but historical patterns suggest the month could be challenging. Over the past 12 years, September has been the weakest for BTC, with a median decline of about 5% and an average loss near 6%, making traders wary as seasonal headwinds return. At the time of writing, BTC is trading at around $108K, increasing less than 1%.
Nick Ruck, director at LVRG Research, noted that Strategy’s premium over Bitcoin is slipping, signaling investor skepticism toward corporate treasury models centered solely on crypto accumulation. He warned that this trend could worsen in September’s historically bearish environment, reflecting a broader market shift toward evaluating long-term value beyond Bitcoin proxies.

Market participants are watching Federal Reserve policy closely. Growing bets on rate cuts in September could ease seasonal weakness, while renewed ETF outflows or an equity market downturn might reinforce the historical pattern and push BTC toward the $100,000 support level. The interplay between macroeconomic signals and crypto-specific flows will likely define the month’s trajectory.
The wider crypto market reflected Bitcoin’s cautious sentiment. Ether decreased by 1.7% to $4,390, Solana declined by 3.4% to $197.6, XRP fell by 4.3% to $2.72, and Dogecoin dropped by 4.2% to $0.21. These shifts negated the profits made in the previous week, highlighting the vulnerability of recent surges among significant altcoins.
Since 2013, Bitcoin has concluded September in the negative territory on eight occasions, experiencing significant declines like the 13% drop in 2019 and the 19% fall in 2014. Even in bull markets, September rallies have often stalled, with only 2015, 2016, and 2023 posting modest gains of 2% to 7%. Traders increasingly treat September as a seasonality trade, a concept describing predictable calendar-based asset fluctuations. While equities also tend to weaken this time of year, Bitcoin’s higher volatility amplifies the effect, making the month a focal point for caution and opportunity.