Bitcoin is trying to rebound after a long period of consolidation. This is a market that remains cautious, but stable.
BITCOIN
Bitcoin is trying to attempt a cautious rebound following a sharp pullback from its peak of $76,000 in the middle of March. With the broader landscape remaining pressured by geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz and oil prices holding above $100, Bitcoin has shown reasonable and notable resilience recently, decoupling from its traditional correlation inversely with the US dollar.

This shift is largely attributed to steady institutional flows into spot ETFs and progress in the United States for the so-called Clarity Act. However, there is a cooling of corporate buying, highlighted by MicroStrategy’s first weekly pause in purchases this year, suggesting a phase of near-term indecision rather than some type of massive breakout.
Technical Levels and Institutional Sentiment
The 50-day EMA is resistance near the $72,000 level, and I think it continues to be very difficult to break above. However, if we were to break above there, then we could open up the move to the $76,000 level to retest that area.
I think it is going to take quite a bit of momentum to make that happen, and I do believe that somewhere around $64,000 we see a massive floor. Anything below there opens up a drop down to the $60,000 region. This is an absolute “must hold” for the market in order to stay remotely bullish.
Below there would be a disaster, but one thing that I continue to see in Bitcoin is its remarkable resilience at the moment considering that there are really no reasons it should do fairly well. Perhaps part of that might be due to the fact that it broke down before the war kicked off, but either way, sometimes it’s about what a market won’t do.