Bitcoin Rangebound At $70K While Macro Cracks Deepen – Why Analyst Says It’s Too Early To Call A Bottom
Bitcoin is hovering around $70.000 in a relatively tight range, slightly dropping today to $69.3000. Price action looks more like consolidation rather than stress or capitulation. Related Reading: Crypto Analysts Warn: Traders Misreading The Clarity Act Could Miss The Real Opportunity Bitcoin Remains Resilient Amidst Geopolitical Unrest Today’s QCP Market Colour reports Bitcoin’s resilience against a macro backdrop that continues to be tenuous, especially in comparison with traditional risk assets. Renewed tensions in the Middle East, oil trading with a geopolitical premium, and a fragile growth outlook are all in play, while risk assets have so far digested the inflation shock more quickly than the potential growth shock. It is still unclear how much broader growth damage will eventually show up if geopolitical strains continue. Flows suggest coins are leaving exchanges (accumulation rather than urgent selling) and BTC dominance is grinding higher, signaling a defensive, bitcoin‑first stance in crypto. Too Early To Call A Bottom Aligned with this, CryptoQuant data suggests that is still too early to assure that the market has reached its bottom. Key cycle indicators brought up by analyst Crypto Dan, such as MVRV, NUPL and their bull–bear cycle gauges have not yet reached the washed‑out levels usually seen at major bear‑market lows. A large share of supply (around half or more) remains in profit, whereas past macro bottoms came when that share fell closer to 45–50%, suggesting more pain or more time could still be needed. A graphic shared by Crypto Dan backs up the analysts arguments that BTC has not yet reached its bottom. Source: CryptoQuant. In the options landscape, implied vols are easing and term structure is in mild contango and carry is positive. This is consistent with consolidation rather than an imminent volatility shock. Downside hedges remain in demand but not at panic levels, showing that professional desks are pricing caution, not a full‑blown crash scenario. Bitcoin appears to be accumulated on dips rather than chased higher. ETF and derivatives flows are more tactical than euphoric, and traders are fading extremes while respecting the range. This leaves BTC in an uncomfortable, though not clearly bearish, position: it no longer behaves like a straightforward high‑beta equity proxy, yet it has not secured steady safe‑haven flows either. Related Reading: Hyperliquid Takes Over Wall Street: Can PURR Options Trigger a Fresh Rally? An In-Between Regime For Bitcoin Markets have repriced the inflation shock (via oil and rates) faster than any potential growth shock, leaving a risk that weaker data or prolonged geopolitical stress forces another leg of repricing. Bitcoin is increasingly treated as a hybrid macro hedge/high‑beta asset, with correlations shifting as institutional capital rotates and tests BTC as a partial stagflation or geopolitical hedge. Summing up, until on‑chain cycle metrics reset and macro visibility improves, rallies are likely tactical, not the start of a clean new trend: the idea of a “headline‑driven range” around $70.000 where dip‑buying and disciplined hedging make more sense than calling a macro bottom. BTC’s price dropped slightly after reaching $71k yesterday, trading for around $69k today. Source: BTCUSD on TradingView Cover image from Perplexity, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview
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