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In the world of cryptocurrency, October has a reputation.
Often referred to as “Uptober,” it is a month when digital assets soar back to life, recovering losses and laying the groundwork for year-end rallies.
However, something broke this year.
What traders anticipated would be a well-known surge instead became a breathtaking reversal. “Uptober” turned into “Wrecktober,” an uncommon decline that defied one of the market’s most established seasonal patterns.
The October after a year of Bitcoin halving finished negatively for the first time ever. That is a signal rather than merely an anomaly.
Another, more significant change was subtly taking shape elsewhere while the cryptocurrency world argued whether it was a halt before the next leg up or the beginning of something darker.
Because, despite the volatility of digital assets, the true story may be unfolding in traditional markets, particularly on the S&P 500’s 100-year price channel, a chart that spans a whole century.


