May starts today. Bitcoin is at $76,189. And one data point has traders watching the next five days more closely than anything since the FOMC meeting.
Crypto analyst Sherlock published a study showing that when Bitcoin fails to beat its April peak within the first five days of May, it drops at least 5% for the rest of the month. The average decline in those years is 20.6%. The April 2026 peak was $79,485. Bitcoin is currently trading $3,300 below it.
If BTC does not close above $79,485 by May 5, the pattern says things get ugly. If it does, the pattern breaks and bulls take control. Five days. One number. That is the trade.
What Does the Data Actually Show?
The basic “sell in May” rule does not work well for Bitcoin. May has closed lower in only 4 out of 8 years since 2018. A coin flip. Not a trading signal.
But Sherlock found a much stronger variation. Since 2020, every time Bitcoin failed to beat its April high in the first five days of May, it posted a significant decline for the rest of the month. The numbers are consistent:
2020: failed to beat April peak, dropped 10%. 2021: failed, dropped 47.7%. 2022: failed, dropped 26.9%. 2023: failed, dropped 12.5%. 2024: failed, dropped 5.9%.
That is five out of five. Every single time Bitcoin could not reclaim its April high in those first five days, it fell. The average decline across all five years is 20.6%.
The one exception was 2025. Bitcoin beat its April peak on May 1 and rallied 16.9% to $111,980 by May 22. The pattern works in both directions. Beat the level, you rally. Miss it, you drop.
Why $79,485 Matters Right Now
Bitcoin’s April 2026 high was $79,485, hit on April 22. Since then, the price has pulled back to $76,189 after the FOMC meeting, record-low consumer sentiment data, and oil surging back above $104. The nine-day ETF inflow streak snapped on April 29 with $137.77 million in outflows.
Getting from $76,189 to $79,485 requires a 4.3% rally in five days. That is not impossible. Bitcoin moved 4.5% in a single day on April 22 when the ceasefire was extended. But the setup heading into May is less favourable than it was heading into late April.
The FOMC is done with a hawkish lean. Powell is staying on the board, limiting Warsh’s ability to cut rates quickly. Consumer sentiment is at its lowest ever. Oil is above $100. And the post-FOMC selloff pattern that has worked 8 out of 9 times just triggered another 2% decline.
What Are the Bulls Counting On?
The bull case has three pillars. Strategy is still buying. Saylor added 3,273 BTC this week and has $46 billion in issuance capacity remaining. USDT supply grew $5 billion to nearly $150 billion, signalling fresh capital in the system. And long-term holders are not selling. On-chain data shows their supply stayed completely flat during the FOMC dip, a strong signal that experienced investors still believe higher prices are coming.
If any combination of ceasefire progress, oil declining below $95, or a surprise positive macro data point lands in the next five days, $79,485 is reachable. Strategy alone could provide the push if Saylor announces another large purchase.
What Are the Bears Counting On?
The bears have their own data. Bitcoin has dropped after 8 of the last 9 FOMC meetings regardless of what the Fed said. The average post-FOMC decline is about 11% within seven days. From $77,000, that projects a move toward $68,000 to $70,000.
Analyst Orbion warned investors to sell immediately, predicting Bitcoin could drop toward the $40,000 region. He points to a descending channel of lower highs and lower lows since the October 2025 peak. Veteran trader Peter Brandt says the chart shows no convincing bottom formation. KillaXBT says Bitcoin has “absolutely zero chance” of reclaiming $100,000 in 2026.
The Crypto Godfather, Michael Terpin, predicts $57,000 by October. If the “sell in May” pattern triggers with a 20.6% average decline, that would take Bitcoin from $79,485 to roughly $63,100. From the current $76,189, it would land around $60,500.
Those numbers would erase April’s entire 13.6% rally and then some.
So What Should You Do?
Watch $79,485 between now and May 5. That is it. The data is clear about what happens on either side of that level.
If Bitcoin closes above $79,485 in the next five days, the “sell in May” pattern breaks. The 2025 precedent showed a 16.9% rally followed. That would target roughly $93,000 by late May.
If Bitcoin fails to reach $79,485 by May 5, every year from 2020 to 2024 saw a decline of at least 5%, with some drops exceeding 25%. The risk-reward tilts sharply to the downside.
This is not investment advice. It is a pattern that has worked five out of five times when Bitcoin missed the level and one out of one times when it beat it. Five days will tell us which version of May 2026 we get.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















