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Bitcoin at $78,000 faces a life-and-death tug-of-war, with low trading volume hiding significant risk of a major trend reversal
After intense volatility following the FOMC meeting, Bitcoin has fully stabilized, as of May 2nd, the price firmly remains above $78,000, with mainstream platform quotes locked in the $78,000-$78,800 range, marking an unexpectedly strong recovery rally.
Looking back at the past week’s trend, BTC completed a typical “bottoming out, rallying, pulling back, and stabilizing” pattern: a rapid rebound from a low of $74,000, briefly surging to $79,500, hitting a ten-week high, then encountering strong selling pressure that pushed back to the key support at $76,000, ultimately relying on the 100-day EMA to recover most of the decline. On May 1st, a single-day surge of 2.52% signaled a strong return of short-term buying power, completely reversing the pre-holiday weakness.
But all traders must be alert to a deadly hidden risk: the current 24-hour cross-exchange trading volume has fallen below $8 billion, hitting a new low since October 2023. In a market with extremely thin volume, it may seem calm on the surface, but liquidity is extremely scarce, and even small capital movements can trigger sharp rises or falls, greatly amplifying short-term volatility risks.
1 Core battle between bulls and bears: two cost lines define the range of oscillation
The current tug-of-war in BTC is essentially a battle over market chip costs, with two core cost lines directly defining short-term upward and downward boundaries: Short-term selling pressure top: $78,900 (STH holder’s cost line). Currently, the price is slightly below this level, and retail investors and short-term funds that entered in recent months are generally at floating losses. Once the price rebounds to $78,900, a large volume of stop-loss selling pressure will flood out, making it the most difficult resistance to break in the short term.
Balance line: $78,000 (market’s true average price TMM). This is the true cost center of all market positions, and all recent oscillations, tug-of-war, and price movements have revolved around this level. Holding above indicates a bullish bias, while falling below signals a return to weakness.
Double-layer support + massive options settlement determine the short-term direction
Support levels below the market are layered to provide a safety net, while derivatives settlement pressure secretly contains short-term trend traps:
Strong short-term support: $75,000-$76,000. This is the dynamic support at the 100-day moving average, also a recent dense zone of chip accumulation, serving as the defensive bottom line for short-term holdings and the core basis for this rebound.
Ultimate defense zone: $65,000-$70,000. If short-term support fails, this zone is recognized by institutional funds as a strong holding fortress and a key line of defense for the medium- to long-term bull market structure, with a high tolerance for errors.
More critically, on May 2nd, a major options settlement occurs: 23,000 BTC options contracts on Deribit expire, with a notional value of up to $1.74 billion. The put-call ratio for this settlement is 1.10, indicating market bearish sentiment, and the maximum pain point is at $76,000. The price at settlement is highly likely to gravitate toward this level, making short-term oscillations and shakeouts inevitable.
The core truth behind macro easing and market tightness, and the divergence of trends
The main driver of this BTC rebound comes from macro liquidity recovery: the Federal Reserve maintaining steady interest rates, a weakening dollar index, easing inflation concerns, and continued strength in US tech stocks, boosting market risk appetite. Coupled with a net inflow of $1.97 billion into ETFs in April, with nine consecutive days of capital inflows, providing a solid bottom support for the rally. However, selling pressure has been brewing beneath the surface, and upward momentum remains limited: since April 15, over 150k BTC have been transferred to exchanges, with massive sell orders accumulating in the $76,700-$79,300 range; the cost basis of 475k BTC holdings is concentrated between $77,800 and $80,880, with investors generally on the brink of breakeven, and any slight rebound could trigger profit-taking sell pressure.
Hidden market concerns: although April’s short-term capital inflows were impressive, ETF net outflows since the beginning of the year have totaled $4.5 billion, with recent outflows of $390 million, indicating that the overall capital pattern has not fully reversed.
Future turning point forecast: strategic positive factors are brewing, and the window for trend reversal is opening. Amid short-term volatility, top-tier long-term positive factors are quietly taking shape, potentially rewriting BTC’s supply and demand landscape: the US has classified Bitcoin as a national security asset, highlighting its geopolitical strategic value. The White House has issued clear signals, and major announcements regarding US strategic Bitcoin reserves may be imminent. Currently, the US Treasury holds 328k BTC in permanent lock-up; if a subsequent bill to increase holdings by 1 million BTC passes, it would create long-term scarcity benefits, supporting a continued bull market. Meanwhile, spot supply continues to dry up, with OTC desks reducing inventories by 20,700 BTC in 30 days, making circulating spot increasingly scarce. Institutional long-term accumulation is clear, and the market is shifting from retail speculation to institutional value allocation.
Key short-term trading signals: volume breakout above $80,000 targets directly at $84,000-$88,000; repeated attempts to push higher and resistance at $76,000, if broken, could lead to a correction toward $70,000-$75,000. In an extremely thin market, heavy positions are strictly prohibited; patience is required until a clear breakout direction emerges.
BTC-0.15%
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