Bitcoin's long-term technical structure is approaching levels that historically precede cycle bottoms, but a $3.67 trillion US Treasury refinancing wall in 2027 may still block a sustained bullish reversal, according to Real Vision Chief Crypto Analyst Jamie Coutts.
"I've argued Q2 and Q3 would mark the bottom based on historical bear-market structures. It's playing out that way," Coutts said. "The relative setup is approaching very attractive levels. The asset is in the long-term accumulation zone."
Bitcoin traded at $63,196 at press time, down from its late-2025 highs as capital rotated out of the crypto sector. Coutts said retail and institutional flows have been exiting Bitcoin since the fourth quarter of 2025, with on-chain activity falling to multi-year lows. "Every marginal unit of liquidity has flowed into AI buildout assets," he said. "Capital flows to where it's treated best."
The macro challenge centers on 2027, when the US must refinance $3.67 trillion in coupon maturities — a figure 36% above the 2020-2025 average, according to Coutts. That debt was issued when rates were near zero and must now roll into a market where yields sit in the 4% to 5% range. Coutts argued that current liquidity levels cannot easily absorb that supply, particularly as the Federal Reserve's balance sheet may shrink further under Kevin Warsh, who has signaled a preference for a smaller balance sheet.
"Rolling $3.67 trillion of maturities through a contracting Fed balance sheet without a bond market accident would be among the most impressive acts of fiscal and monetary policy management in a generation," Coutts said.
The analyst said stablecoins are likely to play an increasingly important role in absorbing some of the liquidity demand. But he warned that Treasuries may need to "start misbehaving" before the policy needle moves, creating an uncomfortable distance before Bitcoin can sense a shift in Fed-side liquidity.
"Bitcoin will detect it first," Coutts said. "But there's still an uncomfortable distance to travel."
The outlook places Bitcoin in a nuanced position. Its long-term technicals are aligning with historical bottoming patterns, yet the macro plumbing — specifically the Treasury refinancing burden and constrained Fed liquidity — may delay the next sustained advance. For investors, the question is whether a bond market stress event will force a policy response before Bitcoin's accumulation phase can translate into a durable uptrend.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.