Bitcoin long-range onchain models are pointing to a possible bottom zone between $46,000 and $54,000, offering traders a rough map for where the current drawdown could eventually settle. The framework, outlined by analyst Willy Woo, is not a price target in the usual sense. It is more like a stress-tested support band built from prior cycle behavior. One of the key markers in that setup is the CVDD Floor Model, which Woo places near $45,500 and says is still trending upward. In crypto terms, that suggests Bitcoin structural floor has continued to rise over time, even as spot price swings remain sharp and sentiment stays fragile. It is the kind of chart traders look at when the market starts asking whether this is just another ugly correction or something heavier. The floor is rising, but capital has been fading The more uncomfortable signal sits underneath the floor model. Woo notes that the orange line, which reflects capital stored in Bitcoin, has been declining since November. That does not automatically mean BTC has to revisit the lower end of the range, but it does imply the network has been absorbing less conviction capital over the past few months. For market participants, that creates an awkward split. The historical support band is still there, but the capital backing behind it does not look especially strong right now. In other words, the model offers a floor zone, not reassurance. Woo’s bigger warning is about the model itself. These onchain frameworks are based on just four prior bear markets, all of them unfolding inside a broader bull cycle for risk assets. If that macro foundation changes, he argues, Bitcoin may not follow its usual recovery script. It could move into a deeper and less familiar bear phase, where historical floor models become less reliable than traders would like.