Bitcoin fluctuates repeatedly between $80,000 and $95,000, and the underlying logic is actually quite clear—there is a large amount of selling pressure stacked above. According to on-chain data analysis, the distribution of short-term holder cost basis shows that supply is concentrated around this price level, creating obvious selling pressure.
In other words, for the price to break through this consolidation zone, new demand must continuously enter the market. Once market participation increases and buying pressure continues to accumulate, there is a chance to break through this supply barrier. Now, it’s a test of whether BTC can gather enough upward momentum.
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AlwaysAnon
· 4h ago
The 80,000-95,000 range really became a bottleneck, with no new orders coming in, it's pointless
If it can't break through, it has to retrace. The supply barrier sounds nice, but in reality, it's just dumping
Let's wait for the news. Relying solely on on-chain data for guesses is too speculative
This wave depends on when institutions start to buy the dip. Retail investors shouting for a breakout every day is useless
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staking_gramps
· 4h ago
The selling pressure is so heavy; it must take large funds to forcefully push it down to break the level.
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OnchainHolmes
· 4h ago
$80,000-$95,000 is the hurdle, to put it simply, it's being tightly stuck by short-term players.
Wait for the main players to accumulate, there's no need to rush.
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AirdropHunterKing
· 5h ago
Oh no, it's the same story about supply barriers again, I'm tired of hearing it. The key is whether the money coming in this time is real cash or contract traders pushing positions—that's two different things.
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I've had my eye on the consolidation range between 8 and 9.5 for a while, just waiting for a sudden surge in volume to see what's real and what's not.
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Honestly, it still depends on who holds more chips. On-chain data looks good, but it all comes down to how the big players move.
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If this wave really breaks the level, I bet the next resistance will be directly at 100,000.
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Supply barriers? Ha, I heard that term last year until I was sick of it, but it still couldn't break the shock.
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Forget analyzing all this; better ask if there's a new coin airdrop. Snagging some free tokens is more practical.
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It's easy to talk about continuous buying pressure, but in reality, it just depends on who collapses first.
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I just want to know if the current entrants are institutions or retail investors—that's the real factor that determines whether a break will happen.
Bitcoin fluctuates repeatedly between $80,000 and $95,000, and the underlying logic is actually quite clear—there is a large amount of selling pressure stacked above. According to on-chain data analysis, the distribution of short-term holder cost basis shows that supply is concentrated around this price level, creating obvious selling pressure.
In other words, for the price to break through this consolidation zone, new demand must continuously enter the market. Once market participation increases and buying pressure continues to accumulate, there is a chance to break through this supply barrier. Now, it’s a test of whether BTC can gather enough upward momentum.