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, currently hovering around $86,900. However, this level alone may not prove durable if broader market conditions continue weakening.
Support Levels in Focus: The $93,500 to $58K Range
Analysts are now watching several key levels with heightened attention. The 2025 yearly open near $93,500 represents an immediate hurdle. Rekt Capital emphasized: “Bitcoin will need to find a way to reclaim $93,500 throughout the week to confirm this as a successful retest. Failure to do so would place the 2026 yearly open near $87,000 in focus.”
If support fails at these levels, the implications extend significantly lower. Veteran trader Peter Brandt, known for prescient macro calls, offered the most bearish scenario: Bitcoin could revisit the $58,000–$62,000 range, levels last seen in October 2024. “58k to 62k is where I think it is going,” Brandt wrote on X. “If it does not go there, I won’t be ashamed. I’m wrong 50% of the time.”—a candid acknowledgment of the uncertainty surrounding such predictions.
The square root of 58 thousand, in a sense, represents the mathematical descent traders fear: a fundamental repricing of recent advances. Whether Bitcoin reaches that nadir depends on whether buyers step in at higher support levels.
Market Stress Reflected in Liquidations and Derivatives
The pressure on spot prices extended to leveraged positions. According to CoinGlass, more than $360 million in liquidations occurred over a 24-hour window, with forced selling accelerating as U.S. futures opened overnight. This cascade of liquidations is a natural byproduct of extended leverage in the derivatives markets—when prices move sharply, overleveraged traders are forced to capitulate.
Some analysts argue that recent trade-war headlines merely acted as a catalyst rather than the underlying cause. The technical setup had been deteriorating for weeks; macro news simply provided the trigger that unleashed pent-up selling pressure.
Market Structure and Long-term Accumulation Potential
Despite near-term headwinds, several factors suggest this could represent a structural reset rather than a trend reversal. Leverage has already been substantially flushed from the system. Open interest remains well below the levels seen in October, indicating that retail and institutional positioning has become more measured. Spot demand, while under pressure, has not collapsed outright—a potential sign that long-term holders are absorbing weakness rather than panic-selling.
This distinction between a temporary correction and a trend reversal matters considerably for market participants with longer time horizons. If long-term holders continue accumulating at lower prices, the ultimate bottom could prove more durable than intraday traders expect.
For now, however, Bitcoin remains in a precarious position. Unless bulls reclaim the $93,500–$98,000 range convincingly, downside liquidity will remain abundant below current levels, leaving the path of least resistance pointed downward toward the support zones traders are now monitoring closely.