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So I've been looking at Bitcoin's current price action and it's actually pretty interesting how this played out. Back in January, BTC kept getting rejected around 100k, which triggered a bunch of profit-taking. Price bounced around consolidation levels for a while but never turned into aggressive selling - more like stabilization vibes.
What got my attention is how the Realized Profit/Loss Ratio behaved. Historically, whenever this indicator stays below 5.0, any rally just fizzles out pretty quick. That's been the pattern over the last couple years. So I was watching to see if it would break above that threshold and signal actual new money coming in rather than just people taking profits.
The Fed kept rates unchanged and Powell called them 'neutral,' which basically meant no more tightening for a while. That helped the sentiment stay cautiously bullish rather than panicky. I also noticed the Bitcoin Spot ETF outflows were slowing down - November had 3.48 billion leaving, December was 1.09 billion, then January only saw 278 million. That slowdown suggested institutional selling pressure was easing.
February historically averages a 14.3% return for Bitcoin, so the setup looked decent heading into that month. Technically, BTC needed to reclaim 90k and push past the upper wedge resistance. If that happened, 98k looked like the next logical target.
Looking back now at the current bitcoin price sitting around 70.92k in April 2026, obviously the February 2026 optimism didn't pan out the way the setup suggested. Sometimes the macro conditions shift or selling pressure returns harder than expected. It's a good reminder that even when the indicators align, markets can still surprise you. The key takeaway - February might have a historical bullish bias, but that doesn't guarantee anything happens.