Bitcoin News
By Jean-Luc Maracon
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The $65,000 Question. If demand keeps fading, analysts are watching $65,000 as the next real test.
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What's Driving the Hesitation. It's not just one thing. Macroeconomic conditions are part of it — investors across asset classes…
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Where Traders Are Watching. Demand indicators and ETF flow data are the two things market participants keep coming back to…
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Bitcoin can't catch a break. The world's largest cryptocurrency is stuck below $80,000, demand has gone soft, and the ETF flows that once looked like a reliable engine of…
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The numbers aren't catastrophic — not yet — but the direction is uncomfortable. Bitcoin hit some genuinely impressive levels earlier this year, drawing in institutional buyers…
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That's the part that probably worries longer-term holders most. Bitcoin ETFs were supposed to be the bridge between traditional finance and crypto — a clean, regulated way for…
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If demand keeps fading, analysts are watching $65,000 as the next real test. That would be a significant pullback — a level that would shake out some of the more recent buyers…
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A drop to $65,000 would represent a meaningful retreat from the highs, and it would force a reckoning for both retail traders and institutional desks that built positions…
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The consolidation scenario is actually the gentler outcome. Bitcoin hovers in a tight range for weeks or months, volume drops, volatility compresses, and traders basically wait.
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It's not just one thing. Macroeconomic conditions are part of it — investors across asset classes are watching interest rate signals, inflation data, and broader risk appetite.
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See also: Bitcoin Slides Below $78K as Bulls Fight to Hold $76,000 Support
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Regulatory uncertainty isn't helping either. The rules around crypto — particularly around ETFs, custody, and institutional participation — are still evolving, and that ambiguity…
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And then there's sentiment, which is maybe the hardest thing to quantify. The bullish energy that characterized earlier price action has given way to something more cautious.
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But if flows keep declining and demand stays soft, the consolidation drags on. And the longer it drags, the more $65,000 moves from a tail risk to a base case.
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Some analysts think the current weakness is basically a reset — a healthy digestion of the earlier gains before the next move higher. Maybe.
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