BTC price trend(2026.02.04)

On February 4, 2026 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) extended its bearish trend with heightened volatility, plunging to an intraday low near $72,930—a fresh multi-month low—before paring losses to trade around $75,800, marking a roughly 2.8% to 3.5% 24-hour decline amid heavy selling pressure, elevated liquidations, and persistent outflows from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs; technically, BTC remained deeply oversold with the 14-period RSI below 25, held below key moving averages, faced immediate resistance near $78,000–$79,500, and relied on critical support around $73,000–$74,500, while market sentiment stayed in extreme fear driven by macro uncertainty, institutional risk aversion, and weak on-chain demand, keeping the short-term bias firmly bearish with a breakdown below $73,000 potentially opening a path toward the psychological $70,000 level.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bullish, with a target price of 76975.41.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2026.02.03)

On February 3, 2026 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) staged a technical rebound in a bearish overall market, bouncing from an intraday low of $74,565 to trade around $78,371 with a 3.53% 24-hour gain, hitting a daily high of $79,349 and closing near the current level, accompanied by a 24-hour trading volume of $16.68 billion and a market cap of $1.56 trillion. Technically, BTC found strong support at the $74,500-$75,000 zone, a level near MicroStrategy’s cost basis and the April 2025 low, while facing stiff immediate resistance at $79,300-$79,500 due to selling pressure from short-term holders, with the key integer level of $80,000 acting as a further upside barrier and intraday dynamic support at $76,800. The 14-period RSI stood at 29.71 in the oversold territory, signaling short-term recovery potential, yet the overall trend remained bearish as BTC stayed below the 20-period EMA, with the MACD showing a negative histogram and no bullish reversal confirmed. Market sentiment was cautious amid the Fed’s hawkish policy expectations and tepid institutional ETF inflows, with spot selling pressure easing on-chain but speculative activity in derivatives markets remaining sluggish; BTC’s short-term direction hinges on a breakout of the $79,500 resistance or a breakdown of the $74,500 support, with a break below the latter opening downside towards the $70,000 psychological level.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bullish, with a target price of 84256.45.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2026.01.11)

On January 11, 2026 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) traded in a narrow consolidative range amid ongoing institutional ETF outflows, with mild intraday volatility: it opened at $90,505.17, touched an intraday high of $91,278.95 and a low of $90,232.13, before closing slightly higher at $90,999.51, with a 24-hour trading volume of $14.00 billion and a market cap of $1.81 trillion. The session was shaped by persistent institutional caution, as U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs logged three consecutive days of outflows totaling around $1.1 billion—nearly erasing the year’s early inflows—and reflecting tactical capital rotation rather than conviction-driven buying. Technically, BTC found support above the $90,000 zone after recovering from recent dips near $89,225, breaking a short-term bearish trend line around $90,750 and trading above the 100-hour simple moving average; immediate resistance lies near $92,000–$92,500, while key support holds at $90,000–$89,250. Market sentiment remained fragile amid mixed signals, with short-term direction tied to the upcoming U.S. nonfarm payrolls data (which could influence Fed rate cut bets) and the sustainability of ETF flows, even as BTC maintained modest upward momentum from its intraday low.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bearish, with a target price of 91787.66.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2026.01.07)

On January 7, 2026 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) entered a high-level volatile consolidation phase after failing to sustain upward momentum, with intense intraday swings: it rallied to a near-high of ~$94,415 before plunging to a low around $91,210, then rebounded strongly to consolidate near $92,500 by the close, posting a slight 0.55% daily decline. The session was marked by a sharp reversal in institutional flows—U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a $486 million net outflow, led by Fidelity’s FBTC ($247.62 million) and BlackRock’s IBIT ($129.96 million)—ending a recent streak of steady inflows and reflecting heightened short-term institutional caution. Technically, the deep V-shaped pullback effectively tested the key support zone of $91,200-$92,000, confirming underlying buying interest; immediate support lies at $91,200 (intraday low), while the $94,000-$94,500 range remains a strong resistance area with heavy selling pressure. Market sentiment shifted from extreme greed to optimism, with short-term direction closely tied to upcoming U.S. economic data (JOLTS and nonfarm payrolls) and the sustainability of institutional flows, while long-term bullish fundamentals persist—backed by structural institutional demand and Bernstein’s forecast of BTC reaching $150,000 in 2026.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bearish, with a target price of 88633.51.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2026.01.06)

On January 6, 2026 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) saw intense intraday volatility amid a sustained bullish trend. It first retraced moderately to test key support near $92,373, then surged to a fresh recent high of approximately $94,758—breaking above the critical $94,000 threshold—before pulling back later due to profit-taking and lingering caution ahead of upcoming U.S. economic data. By the close, BTC had consolidated around $93,500.

The session’s price action was primarily driven by robust institutional demand: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a staggering $697 million in net inflows, marking the largest single-day inflow since October 2025. BlackRock’s IBIT led the way with $372 million in inflows, followed by Fidelity’s FBTC at $191 million. Complementing this, on-chain data showed roughly $1.2 billion worth of BTC withdrawn from exchanges into long-term cold storage, further tightening circulating supply.

Technically, BTC maintained a solid bullish structure characterized by higher highs and higher lows, though short-term exhaustion signals emerged—such as the Eagle indicator turning negative. Immediate support is at $93,500 (the post-breakout consolidation level), with core support ranging from $92,370 to $92,800 (a zone that combines previous resistance-turned-support and the uptrend line). Key resistance clusters around $95,000–$96,000, a critical psychological and technical level.

Trading volume remained strong, reflecting fierce multi-party positioning battles. Market sentiment hovered in the “extreme greed” zone, with near-term direction closely tied to the sustainability of institutional inflows and upcoming U.S. employment data—specifically JOLTS and non-farm payrolls—which could sway expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bullish, with a target price of 94008.14.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2026.01.05)

On January 5, 2026 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) extended its year-opening rebound with strong bullish momentum, gaining nearly 2% intraday to break above the $93,000 mark, hitting a recent high of $93,400 before oscillating narrowly around $92,900. The session was supported by lingering optimism from easing macroeconomic uncertainty and potential liquidity expectations, despite ongoing Fed rate-cut分歧 (policymakers remain split on 2026’s rate path, with market pricing in a 20% chance of a 25-basis-point cut in January and 45% in March). Technically, the daily chart showed a series of small bullish candles, with the 5-day and 10-day moving averages forming a golden cross and prices standing above all key moving averages, confirming a clear bullish structure; however, hourly and 4-hour RSI indicators reached overbought territory at 81.5 and 78.0 respectively, signaling short-term pullback pressure. Trading volume picked up moderately, with core support at the psychological $90,000 level and a stronger technical support zone between $88,800-$89,600 aligned with the 20-month EMA, while immediate resistance clustered in the $93,000-$95,000 range amid December 2025’s trapped selling pressure. The day’s price action reversed late-2025’s weak trend, though mixed market sentiment emerged as the asset nears critical resistance, with the near-term outlook tied to Fed policy cues and volume confirmation for a sustained breakout.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bearish, with a target price of 93021.14.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2026.01.01)

On January 1, 2026 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) kicked off the new year with heightened volatility amid subdued holiday liquidity, trading between an intraday low of $87,000 and a high of $89,000 before closing marginally lower at approximately $87,800—marking a 1.2% 24-hour decline. The session was characterized by a sharp intraday pullback from the $89,000 level, triggering widespread liquidations that saw over 164,000 traders wiped out with total liquidation value exceeding $228 million, predominantly from long positions ($157 million). Key bearish drivers included persistent institutional risk aversion reflected in $144 million in net outflows from U.S. spot BTC ETFs, lingering market pessimism following BTC’s 22% December drop (its worst monthly performance since December 2018) and over 30% decline from its October 2025 all-time high of $126,000, alongside conflicting Fed rate cut expectations (market pricing in two 2026 cuts vs. some forecasts of three). Offsetting these headwinds was continued BTC accumulation by El Salvador (holding 7,517 BTC as of early 2026) and technical support around the $87,000–$85,000 range. Trading volume remained muted at $16.5 billion, lacking sufficient momentum to drive a meaningful rebound, with market sentiment entrenched in “extreme fear” (Fear & Greed Index at 20) and near-term technical indicators leaning 80% bearish.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bullish, with a target price of 89774.14.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2025.12.29)

On December 29, 2025 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) witnessed dramatic intraday volatility, surging as high as $90,230 during the Asian trading session before erasing gains to close lower around $87,318, marking a 0.64% 24-hour decline with a trading volume of approximately $48.99B and a market cap of $1.75T. The initial rally past the key $90,000 psychological level was driven by renewed geopolitical tensions (fading Russia-Ukraine peace hopes), surging oil prices stoking inflation-hedging demand, steady inflows into U.S. spot BTC ETFs, and short-term retail bullish positioning in futures markets—though cautious sentiment persisted as trading volume remained 16% below the 30-day average. Technically, key levels included immediate support around $87,250–$88,000 and resistance at $90,500–$91,500, with market focus turning to the upcoming Fed policy meeting minutes for potential directional catalysts.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bullish, with a target price of 88313.65.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2025.12.28)

On December 28, 2025 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) traded around $87,800–$87,923.52 with a modest 0.42% 24-hour gain and $271.52M trading volume, remaining in a cautious range amid year-end market dynamics—down 31% from its October all-time high of $126,080 and part of a 9% December decline following an 86.76% Q4 surge. The session’s choppiness stemmed from multiple factors: thin holiday liquidity amplifying price moves, mild ETF outflows as institutions rebalanced year-end portfolios, lingering Fed high-rate pressure, derivatives expiries, and investor caution amid BTC’s decoupling from stocks and underperformance relative to gold and silver. Technical and fundamental crosswinds persisted, including strained miner profitability post-2024 halving (3.125 BTC/block rewards, 40% hash rate surge) and bearish near-term sentiment, offset by long-term institutional support (e.g., Strategy’s $58.6B BTC holdings, 86% institutional allocation via ETFs/ETPs) and regulatory tailwinds like U.S. strategic reserve proposals.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bearish, with a target price of 88699.39.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!

BTC price trend(2025.12.23)

On December 23, 2025 (GMT-5), Bitcoin (BTC) experienced intensified volatility with a “rally and retreat” pattern—opening relatively stably, it briefly surged to a near $89,428 intraday high and even approached the $90,000 psychological level before facing significant selling pressure during the U.S. trading session, pulling back sharply to a low near $86,684, and finally consolidating to close around the $87,000–$88,000 range with moderate trading volume and declining momentum. Technically, the daily chart showed a small bearish candle with a long lower shadow, the MACD indicator maintained a weak death cross on the daily timeframe while forming a golden cross on the hourly chart, and the RSI hovered near the oversold zone, reflecting large divergence between bulls and bears without a clear trend direction; the core trading range remained $86,000–$89,000, with key supports anchored at $87,000–$87,500 and resistance concentrated near $89,000–$90,000. The choppy price action was driven by multiple factors: upcoming record $28.5 billion Deribit options expiration, continued ETF outflows, seasonal liquidity tightening, lingering macroeconomic uncertainties from Fed policy divergence and spillover effects of the Bank of Japan’s rate hike, as well as institutional profit-taking pressure at year-end, keeping market sentiment cautiously defensive with traders favoring rolling over protective positions rather than closing them out.

The market outlook for tomorrow is bearish, with a target price of 85849.44.


This content is for informational/entertainment purposes only—a friendly market recap, not investment advice or a “green light” to trade crypto. Crypto markets are volatile (a wild ride!), so trade wisely, manage risk, and act at your own peril: all profits/losses are yours, and you bear full responsibility. May the crypto odds be with you, but caveat emptor (kind of)!