After BTC surged to 63,254 and then pulled back to 62,958, 63,000 still couldn’t hold—does this breakout count as successful?



BTC topped at 63,254.5 but failed to hold, retreating to around 62,958. The 24h high of 63,254.5 corresponds to a short-term upper wick area; after the price touched it, it quickly pulled back, indicating that sell orders are indeed pressing above 63,000.

K-line details:

On the 1-hour chart, after the high of 63,254.5, there were consecutive small bearish candles and a continued pullback. The closing prices gradually drifted lower, and short-term momentum clearly weakened. The AVL value is 62,962.7, and the current price is 62,958—right around the moving average—showing that the short-term “dōkòng” cost is close. No side has gained an advantage.

From 62,776 to 63,254, the rally was not strongly supported by volume. It looks more like a rebound pushed by head-covering and position unwinds than a fresh buying demand stepping in. The 24h trading volume is 9,595.2 BTC, which isn’t large at this level.

What to watch next?

63,000 is the “dōkòng” watershed. If the next 1–2 hourly K-lines can reclaim above 63,000 and come with increased volume, the “dōtóu” side can still continue. Otherwise, if the price keeps trading below 63,000, in the short term it will likely shift toward a pullback to 62,500–62,600.

When “dōkòng” hasn’t reached the point of a “sure win,” watch more and act less at this level—wait until the structure is clear before making a move. $BTC #特朗普宣布美伊停火结束 #特朗普宣布美伊停火结束
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