Bitcoin hit $60,001 on a Thursday in early February, and within 24 hours the price climbed nearly 19%. For anyone watching from the outside, the move looked sudden. For anyone tracking sentiment data, it followed a pattern consistent enough to justify serious attention. Let’s analyze the following data, provided by analyst SanSights on Samtiment, a market intelligence and data analysis platform focused on the crypto sector.

The relationship between crowd fear and price floors in crypto runs in a predictable direction. When negativity peaks — when social media fills with predictions of collapse and retail traders start talking about permanent losses — prices tend to bottom out at the same moment. The crowd rarely nails the timing exactly. But the crowd’s worst panic tends to land near the actual low.
Social volume data tracks how often users on major platforms mention words like “buy,” “buying,” or “bought” alongside the word “dip.” The frequency of those mentions rises sharply when prices fall fast, which makes sense: people discuss buying opportunities more when prices are lower. The limitation is that raw volume can mislead. More activity on social media sometimes just means more people are online, not that sentiment has shifted in any meaningful way.

A more reliable filter comes from comparing the social dominance of “dip” against the social dominance of a harder word — “crash.” Dominance measures the share of total crypto discussions dedicated to each term, rather than simply counting raw mentions.

When “crash” starts claiming a larger share of conversations, it signals retail participants have moved past concern and into genuine fear. Historically, the shift in language has corresponded with periods where the market was close to exhausting its selling pressure, not accelerating it.
Reading blockchain data to find undervalued entry points
Beyond social media, the on-chain metric known as MVRV — Mean Value to Realized Value — gives a mathematical reading of whether average holders sit on gains or losses. The 30-day version measures wallets active in the past month and compares what they paid for their coins against current prices. When the ratio drops into what analysts call the “Strongly Undervalued Zone,” the data shows average recent buyers carry losses deep enough to mark exhaustion among sellers — a condition often preceding a price floor.

Bitcoin, Ethereum, Cardano, XRP, and Chainlink all carry 30-day MVRV readings that shift in and out of extreme zones as markets move. Entering a position when the ratio sits in deeply negative territory has historically produced better outcomes than buying during rallies or reacting to headlines alone. Avoiding heavy exposure when the ratio climbs into the “Strongly Overvalued Zone” has worked as a complementary discipline on the upside.

Trending Words and Trending Stories dashboards add one more layer. When terms like “down” or “selling” dominate trending content — or when story clusters around phrases like “going to zero” appear — retail traders are usually capitulating, not initiating new selling. Capitulation marks the end of a selling cycle far more often than the beginning of a new one.
The February bounce in Bitcoin did not come from nowhere. Sentiment data, social language patterns, and on-chain readings all pointed to the same pressure zone before prices moved. Relying on objective indicators instead of instinct or panic gives traders a clearer picture exactly when markets bleed the hardest.
