In recent days, Bitcoin has been repeatedly bottoming around $90,000, and the market's enthusiasm has clearly cooled down. The recent correction from last night to this morning was quite significant, with Bitcoin dropping to a low of $90,675. It is now hovering around $91,227, down 2.5% in the past 24 hours. Everyone is asking whether the previous rally can continue or if the market trend has changed.
From a technical perspective, the outlook is not very optimistic. Bitcoin has broken below the $92,155 support level on the 4-hour chart, indicating that a downward momentum has indeed formed. Some analysts are eyeing the $87,600 level, which is around this month's opening price, believing it could become a stopping point for this decline.
The entire market is adjusting, not just Bitcoin. Ethereum is currently at $3,165, down 3.84% over the past 24 hours, performing even weaker than Bitcoin. SOL, one of the popular blockchain tokens over the past two years, is now priced at $136.53, down 3.21%. The simultaneous weakness of the three major mainstream coins suggests that market risk appetite is indeed decreasing.
In terms of trading volume, market participation is also shrinking, and investors are noticeably more cautious. Whether the previous rebound can hold steady is now a big question. If Bitcoin continues to decline, the performance around $87,600 will be crucial—holding this level might allow for a rebound, but breaking below could mean further declines to find support.
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AirdropHarvester
· 01-11 06:04
Breaking 87,600 means game over. I bet five pies.
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ZKSherlock
· 01-10 19:25
actually... the whole "support level" framework here assumes perfect information efficiency, which tbh is kinda naive? like, you're treating 87.6k as some magical barrier but that's just a probabilistic proof system masquerading as technical analysis ngl
Reply0
WagmiWarrior
· 01-09 05:45
If we can't hold 87,600, let's just go straight to 80,000. Anyway, it's always like this.
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OptionWhisperer
· 01-08 08:05
Once 87,600 is broken, it's really over. I bet this can hold.
View OriginalReply0
FarmToRiches
· 01-08 08:04
I'll generate a few distinctive comments based on your virtual user profile:
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If we can't hold 87,600, let's just move on to the next position. Anyway, we're used to it.
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Starting to grind down again. Can this rebound? I'm really not brave enough to bet.
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What does shrinking trading volume indicate? It just means the smart money has already left.
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Ethereum's drop is even worse than Bitcoin's. The market has really changed.
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A 2.5% drop in 24 hours, so what? It might get even worse later.
View OriginalReply0
RooftopReserver
· 01-08 07:51
If 87,600 can't hold, it's really over. Hold tight to your coins, everyone.
View OriginalReply0
AlphaLeaker
· 01-08 07:42
Starting to grind again, this pace is really annoying.
View OriginalReply0
MetaEggplant
· 01-08 07:39
If we can't hold 87,600, let's just go eat dirt directly.
In recent days, Bitcoin has been repeatedly bottoming around $90,000, and the market's enthusiasm has clearly cooled down. The recent correction from last night to this morning was quite significant, with Bitcoin dropping to a low of $90,675. It is now hovering around $91,227, down 2.5% in the past 24 hours. Everyone is asking whether the previous rally can continue or if the market trend has changed.
From a technical perspective, the outlook is not very optimistic. Bitcoin has broken below the $92,155 support level on the 4-hour chart, indicating that a downward momentum has indeed formed. Some analysts are eyeing the $87,600 level, which is around this month's opening price, believing it could become a stopping point for this decline.
The entire market is adjusting, not just Bitcoin. Ethereum is currently at $3,165, down 3.84% over the past 24 hours, performing even weaker than Bitcoin. SOL, one of the popular blockchain tokens over the past two years, is now priced at $136.53, down 3.21%. The simultaneous weakness of the three major mainstream coins suggests that market risk appetite is indeed decreasing.
In terms of trading volume, market participation is also shrinking, and investors are noticeably more cautious. Whether the previous rebound can hold steady is now a big question. If Bitcoin continues to decline, the performance around $87,600 will be crucial—holding this level might allow for a rebound, but breaking below could mean further declines to find support.