Bittensor (TAO) Holders Confront the Truth: This Is No Longer Distribution, It’s Capitulation

Bittensor (TAO) is sitting in a very different mood compared to the autumn pump. The Bittensor price has spent weeks sliding lower, and the chart now looks more like “acceptance” than “hype.” That matters, because it changes what the TAO price usually does next.

This take is coming from analyst CyrilXBT, who framed the move as a turning point. In his words, “This is no longer ‘distribution.’ This is acceptance at lower prices.” He also called the area a “high-conviction demand zone,” pointing to a long downtrend, fading seller momentum, and drying volume.

What the TAO chart is actually showing

On the daily TAO/USDT chart, the TAO price is trading around the low-$200s, after a clear breakdown from the November peak near the low-$500s. The structure since that top is consistent: lower highs, weak bounces, and a slow grind downward rather than a clean V-shaped reversal. That usually signals steady sell pressure instead of one-off panic.

The most important detail is volume. The biggest volume burst shows up during the sharp move higher and the reversal zone in October–November, which is when the market was most emotional. Since then, volume has cooled as price has drifted down. That supports CyrilXBT’s point about exhaustion: the “urgent selling” phase appears to have already happened, and what’s left is a market that’s simply willing to transact at lower levels.

Source: X/@cyrilXBT

At the same time, calling it “capitulation” is only partly supported by this specific chart. Classic capitulation often comes with a violent flush and a large final volume spike. Here, the message is more like fatigue than maximum panic. It’s closer to “the crowd has stopped fighting the downtrend,” which is still a big psychological shift.

Key TAO price zones to watch

The chart highlights a broad demand region around the current area, roughly the $200–$260 band, where price is now compressing. If the TAO price continues to hold in this region, it can become a base. If it loses it cleanly, the chart opens room for a deeper sweep toward the high-$100s, especially if broader crypto risk turns off.

Overhead, the first area that matters is the prior breakdown region around $260–$300. That’s where a lot of failed bounces started. If TAO can reclaim and hold above that zone, it would be the first sign that the Bittensor price is shifting from “sell rallies” to “buy dips.” Above that, the next heavier resistance sits around the low-to-mid $300s, where price previously chopped before the leg down accelerated.

Does CyrilXBT’s take make sense?

Mostly, yes. The downtrend is obvious, and the volume trend does support the idea that forced selling has cooled. The chart also shows that TAO is no longer behaving like a “top distribution range” where sellers are unloading into strong demand. Instead, it looks like price has already been repriced lower and is now trying to stabilize.

The one tweak is the terminology. “Capitulation” can be real, but the evidence here points more to acceptance and exhaustion than a dramatic final flush. That difference matters because an “acceptance base” can still take time. It doesn’t guarantee an immediate bounce.

Read also: “The Timeline Was Wrong”: XRP Community Confronts Reality After 7 Years of Waiting

What TAO holders could expect post-halving in 2026

Post-halving narratives usually come down to one thing: reduced new supply hitting the market. If Bittensor’s emissions slow meaningfully after the halving, it can reduce the constant sell pressure that comes from ongoing rewards distribution. That can help the TAO price recover if demand returns at the same time.

But supply changes alone rarely do the whole job. The Bittensor price will still depend on whether the network stays relevant in the AI-crypto cycle. If subnet activity, real usage, and ecosystem growth stay strong, a lower emission rate can amplify upside during risk-on periods. If sentiment stays weak or AI narratives cool off, halving effects can take longer to show up and may only act as a “floor-builder,” not an instant catalyst.

Right now, the chart is basically saying this: the market has stopped paying premium prices for TAO, and it’s testing whether this lower range can hold without another wave of selling.

Read also: Bittensor (TAO) vs. Hedera (HBAR): Which Altcoin Could Perform Better in 2026?

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Petar Jovanović
Petar Jovanović

As the Head of Content at Captainaltcoin, I bring years of experience in the crypto industry. With a strong belief in the potential of the web3 market since 2017, I'm passionate about sharing valuable insights and knowledge. Feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn and let's discuss the exciting world of cryptocurrencies and decentralized technologies!

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