Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
#BitcoinWeakens
Bitcoin is sitting at $66,486 right now, down over 3% in the last 24 hours and roughly 23% below where it was just 90 days ago. The move from near $126,000 earlier this year to where we are now is not a blip. It is a structural shift in how the market is pricing risk, and a lot of people who were calling for six-figure continuation are now quietly revising their targets downward.
The chart does not lie. On the daily timeframe, moving averages are stacked in a clean bearish order. MA7 sitting below MA30 sitting below MA120 is about as textbook a downtrend signal as you will find. The 4-hour picture mirrors it. The ADX is elevated, meaning this is not directionless chop — the selling pressure has conviction behind it. Volume on down days has been expanding, which is the kind of print that tells you this is distribution, not healthy consolidation.
Fear and Greed is printing at 13. That is deep into Extreme Fear territory. For context, readings that low historically cluster near major capitulation events. The catch is that we have not seen the kind of full-blown liquidation cascade that typically marks a true bottom. On-chain losses are significant but not yet at the threshold that precedes exhaustion-driven reversals. That means the washout may still be ahead of us, not behind us.
What makes this cycle particularly complex is the divergence between institutional behavior and price action. Strategy adding over a thousand BTC near the $74,000 range, BlackRock moving ETH and BTC through Coinbase Prime, Morgan Stanley launching the cheapest spot Bitcoin ETF on the market at 14 basis points — these are not bearish headlines. These are long-term conviction plays by some of the largest capital allocators on earth. And yet price continues to bleed.
The explanation is relatively straightforward once you look at the composition of sellers. Short-term holders — the people who bought between roughly $70,000 and $85,000 — are sitting on losses and capitulating at or near their cost basis. Every bounce gets sold into. Institutional demand is absorbing that supply, but it is absorbing it slowly, and the overhang is still large enough to keep a ceiling on any meaningful recovery attempt.
The $65,500 level is the line in the sand right now. It held as the 24-hour low. Below it, the next meaningful technical support cluster sits somewhere between $60,000 and $57,000, with more aggressive models projecting a sweep toward the low $40,000s if macro conditions deteriorate further. That would represent roughly a 70% drawdown from the cycle high — painful but not unprecedented when measured against prior cycles.
Bitcoin dominance has dropped to six-month lows near 58%, but altcoins are not catching a bid either. That is a worrying sign. In healthy risk-on rotations, capital flows down the cap scale as BTC consolidates. What we are seeing instead is broad crypto market contraction. ETH and SOL are both weak. Total market cap is shedding percentage points. The sector is not rotating — it is retreating.
The macro backdrop is not helping. Rate sensitivity remains elevated. Risk assets across equities and crypto are correlated in ways that frustrate Bitcoin maximalists but reflect the reality of institutional portfolio construction. When funds need to reduce risk, Bitcoin is liquid enough to sell quickly, and that liquidity works against it in drawdown environments.
None of this means Bitcoin is broken as a long-term thesis. The structural adoption story is intact. Coinbase and Fannie Mae partnering to create BTC-backed mortgages is the kind of product that would have been considered science fiction three years ago. Sovereign-level ETF products are being launched by the largest wealth management networks in the world. The rails are being built regardless of price.
But in the near term, price is price. The market is telling you something when it sells into every piece of positive institutional news. The smart money is positioned long. The struggling money is positioned wrong and is being forced out. Until that flush completes, rallies are opportunities for patient sellers, not clear signals for new entries.
Watch the $65,500 support with respect. If it cracks on volume, the next chapter of this drawdown starts, and it will likely be faster and more violent than what we have seen so far. If it holds and buyers defend it aggressively, there is a case for a relief rally back toward $70,000 — the old 2021 all-time high that has now flipped into resistance. Either way, this is not the time to be passive or sloppy with risk management.
#BitcoinWeakens #BTC #CryptoMarket