BTC's recent performance on the hourly chart looks weak—three consecutive bearish candles, with the price hugging the lower Bollinger Band. It’s a bit ugly. But there’s an interesting point: during the session, the price once broke below the lower Bollinger Band but failed to stabilize and was pulled back. This kind of move is usually a "false breakout" or a test of the market, mainly aimed at clearing out panic sell orders and does not necessarily indicate a trend reversal.
Looking at history, the 90500 level is not the first time it has served as support; it has been proven multiple times as a rebound point. This area has accumulated considerable psychological consensus and is technically solid, serving as a defensive line in the current pattern. As long as the price stays above this zone without breaking down, there’s still a possibility for market buy orders to gather again, and the space for a rebound naturally opens up.
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bridge_anxiety
· 21h ago
If this critical line of 90,500 cannot be broken, there is still hope. Fake breakouts and clearing positions are tactics we've seen many times.
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TokenCreatorOP
· 01-07 19:55
As long as 90,500 isn't broken, there's still hope. This wave is indeed testing the market.
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SignatureDenied
· 01-07 19:53
This line of defense at 90500 really needs to be held, or else the mentality will easily collapse.
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DegenApeSurfer
· 01-07 19:51
Fake breakouts — I've seen this trick too many times. Every time, someone gets scared out, and then it rebounds.
BTC's recent performance on the hourly chart looks weak—three consecutive bearish candles, with the price hugging the lower Bollinger Band. It’s a bit ugly. But there’s an interesting point: during the session, the price once broke below the lower Bollinger Band but failed to stabilize and was pulled back. This kind of move is usually a "false breakout" or a test of the market, mainly aimed at clearing out panic sell orders and does not necessarily indicate a trend reversal.
Looking at history, the 90500 level is not the first time it has served as support; it has been proven multiple times as a rebound point. This area has accumulated considerable psychological consensus and is technically solid, serving as a defensive line in the current pattern. As long as the price stays above this zone without breaking down, there’s still a possibility for market buy orders to gather again, and the space for a rebound naturally opens up.