The highest point (in price, in market capitalization) that a cryptocurrency has been in history. *see All-Time-Low (ATL).
An all-time high (ATH) refers to the highest price a cryptocurrency hit during its trading history. All-time highs are the opposite of
all-time lows, the lowest price a cryptocurrency has ever reached.
All-time highs are easy to spot since a coin's upward trajectory is easy to quantify. For example, Bitcoin hit an all-time high of over $67,000 in the fall of 2021.
Cryptocurrency investors often use all-time highs as a measuring stick for the potential
market capitalization of a coin. Enthusiastic investors tend to extrapolate the all-time high of a coin linearly into the future. This leads them to believe that a cryptocurrency can hit much higher valuations much sooner than is actually the case. This was true during the last Bitcoin
bull run, which saw many analysts call for new all-time highs of over $100,000. These never materialized.
Bitcoin and
Ethereum traded at an all-time high of $67,549 and $4,810 on November 9, 2021, respectively.
Cryptocurrencies hit all-time highs during bull runs. When a cryptocurrency hits an all-time high, investors are generally euphoric and predict even more gains to come in the near future. During extended
bullish periods, a coin (or token) can hit several all-time highs as it keeps appreciating. In
technical analysis, this is known as “forming
higher highs.” Eventually, the coin exhausts its upward trajectory and experiences a
correction.
During
bear markets, the correction of a cryptocurrency is measured in how much value it has lost from its all-time high. In crypto bear markets, corrections of more than 70% are considered normal.
Altcoins can even correct up to 90% or 99%. Some cryptocurrencies never recover from a bear market, leaving investors that did not sell around their all-time high chasing losses.