BULLISH
BTC
WHEN
GMIX
Bitcoin is still going through a muddy patch, one of those that dirties certainties and makes forecasts almost shameful. On one side, the crypto market gives the impression of brewing a classic relapse, slow, methodical, almost textbook in its mechanics. On the other, some technical signals maintain the idea of a sudden awakening, like a match near a can. As a result, even the most seasoned analysts are divided, and BTC moves in this fog without a real compass, nor any real schedule to decide cleanly.
For five weeks, bitcoin has been stagnating in a compression that wears down nerves and turns every rise into a promise immediately taken back. The highs compress, the lows rise, but the whole keeps the look of a sick market, not a rebuilt market.
Filbfilb remains cautious and points to a pivotal level that many now see as a technical judge of peace:
BTC is currently retracing to its former support, around the 50-day moving average as expected. The 50-day moving average is currently around 68,800 dollars, roughly, and remains critical to watch in my view.
The crypto market hears this message without really disputing it. Each bitcoin rebound seems to breathe under assistance, then falls again under sellers’ pressure. This structure feeds a heavy mood among crypto traders, as it suggests less of a recovery than a purge preparation.
Beneath the surface, no clear demand is seen, only surges methodically sold, as if the market was testing everything.
Yet, the crypto market is not completely locked. Bitcoin shows unexpected resistance in the 67,000 to 68,000 dollars zone, despite an unfavorable context. Oil prices are soaring, geopolitical tensions intensify, and yet BTC still stands.
This detail intrigues, as it contradicts the scenario of an immediate drop. One level now concentrates all attention: 68,800 dollars. This threshold corresponds to a major technical retracement and acts as a lock.
If it breaks, the mechanism could change abruptly. Market data indicate zones of selling liquidations between 68,500 and 74,000 dollars. This means that a break could trigger a domino effect, forcing sellers to cover.
Michael van de Poppe summarizes this tension with lucidity:
It is better to ask when bitcoin will drop rather than if it will happen. Every rebound is immediately rejected and the trend remains bearish.
Bitcoin therefore remains suspended between two opposing scenarios: a purge downward or a squeeze upward.
The crypto market also looks elsewhere to decide this dilemma. Some on-chain data show a gradual return of long-term demand on bitcoin. This silent accumulation could, in the long run, serve as a foundation. In other words, behind the current nervousness, a deeper dynamic might already be building.