Bitcoin dropped 10% in a week, falling below $108,000 after reaching $126,160 ATH. Analysts see this as a healthy correction amid institutional ETF inflows and corporate treasury adoption.

Bitcoin's October Correction: Healthy Pullback or Warning Sign?
Bitcoin experienced a significant 10% decline over the past week, with prices falling below $108,000 as of October 16, 2025. This marks a 14.3% drop from the cryptocurrency's recent all-time high of $126,160 reached on October 6, signaling what many analysts are calling a healthy market correction after weeks of sustained gains.
Market Dynamics and Institutional Response
The current pullback comes amid broader market volatility triggered by geopolitical tensions, particularly the U.S.-China trade tariff shocks announced by President Trump. 'This is exactly the kind of leverage reset the market needed after such an aggressive run-up,' noted crypto analyst Michael Saylor in recent comments. The downturn resulted in approximately $19-20 billion in leveraged positions being liquidated across crypto markets within 24 hours, creating significant selling pressure.
Despite the short-term volatility, institutional interest remains robust. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) recorded unprecedented inflows of $3.5 billion during the first week of October alone, positioning Bitcoin ETFs as top performers in the broader ETF landscape.
Corporate Treasury Holdings Provide Structural Support
One of the key factors supporting Bitcoin's long-term outlook is the growing corporate adoption. Companies now hold approximately 11.47% of the total Bitcoin supply, with a combined value of around $247 billion. MicroStrategy leads the pack with 640,250 BTC, followed by MARA Holdings (53,250 BTC) and other major corporations.
'We view this correction as a buying opportunity rather than a reason for concern,' stated Strategy CEO Michael Saylor. 'The fundamental case for Bitcoin as digital gold remains stronger than ever.'
Supply Dynamics and Long-term Outlook
With 94.93% of Bitcoin's total 21 million supply already mined, the structurally scarce nature of the asset continues to provide fundamental support. Only approximately 1.06 million Bitcoin remain to be mined, creating natural supply constraints that many analysts believe will support prices over the long term.
The current market capitalization stands at $2.15 trillion, while daily trading volume hovers around $87.8 billion. Bitcoin's position relative to gold remains strong, representing 7.24% of gold's market capitalization and equivalent to 25.7 ounces of gold per Bitcoin.
Expert Analysis and Forward Projections
Market analysts remain largely optimistic despite the recent downturn. Fundstrat's Tom Lee maintains his $200,000-$250,000 price target for Bitcoin in 2025, citing continued institutional adoption and favorable monetary policy conditions.
'The current pullback represents a healthy consolidation phase within a broader bull market cycle,' explained crypto market analyst Lyn Alden. 'We've seen this pattern repeatedly throughout Bitcoin's history - sharp rallies followed by necessary corrections that establish stronger support levels.'
Looking ahead, market participants will be closely monitoring several key factors including Federal Reserve interest rate decisions, continued ETF inflows, and broader macroeconomic developments. Many experts believe that once the current selling pressure subsides, Bitcoin could resume its upward trajectory toward the $120,000-$125,000 range.