Been watching Bitcoin around $80.36K lately, and the technicals are telling an interesting story. We're basically sitting between two key zones – support holding firm around $62,700 and resistance crowding near $74,500–$80,700. The recent market crashes from the $126K peak down to the $60K range were brutal, but here's the thing: the structure actually looks more like consolidation than a full breakdown.



What caught my eye is the volume patterns. ETF inflows hit $471M recently, which basically means institutions are absorbing the selling pressure instead of panicking out. Meanwhile, whale wallets added 12K BTC over the past week, so the big money is quietly accumulating on dips. Exchange reserves are at all-time lows too, suggesting people are moving coins to cold storage rather than dumping them.

The daily chart shows higher lows forming, which is the kind of signal that usually precedes a bounce. If we can clear $80K with some volume confirmation, the next targets would be $85K and potentially $90K–$100K over the next few months. But obviously if support breaks below $62,700, the whole narrative flips bearish. Right now though, the mix of institutional buying and declining exchange supply makes me think we're more likely in an accumulation phase than a crash continuation.

Technical indicators are mixed – RSI is neutral at 47.78, MACD is showing early bullish momentum, but ADX suggests the trend isn't super strong yet. Classic setup for a patience game. Most traders I know are using dollar-cost averaging into the $63,500–$62,700 zone rather than going all-in, which makes sense given the volatility we've seen. Stop-losses below support keep risk defined, and waiting for a daily close above resistance improves the odds. The market's basically telling us to stay sharp and let confirmation do the talking.
BTC0.74%
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