The price of Bitcoin has been in a consolidation phase since rebounding from the February 6th low near $59,930. After the sharp decline from the January 28th high near $90,352, the market managed to recover approximately 38.2% of that prior drop — a key Fibonacci retracement level that often acts as resistance in corrective bounces. That retracement level comes in at $71,551, has proven to be formidable resistance target. Stay below keeps the sellers in firm control.
Since the February 6th low, there have been six separate attempts to push above that retracement level, and each rally has stalled. There was one brief exception during Sunday’s trade on February 8th, when price extended to $72,174. However, that breakout attempt was quickly rejected, and the market failed to build momentum above the retracement ceiling. Subsequent rallies once again fell short. In essence, buyers had multiple opportunities to seize control — and they were unable to sustain a breakout. That failure keeps the broader corrective tone intact.
From a technical standpoint, another important development is the behavior of the 100-hour and 200-hour moving averages (the blue and green lines). Both moving averages have flattened out. A flattening 100- and 200-hour moving average is a classic sign of a non-trending market — a market lacking directional conviction. Consolidations like this do not last forever. Non-trending markets eventually transition into trending markets, and when they do, the move can be decisive.
Adding to that non-trending dynamic, the price action today saw the 100- and 200-hour moving averages converge with each other and with the price itself — what I often refer to as “Three’s a Crowd.” When price and key moving averages compress together, it reflects balance between buyers and sellers. That balance rarely persists for long. The market typically resolves such compression with a directional expansion — either sharply higher or sharply lower.
For now, with price holding below both the 100- and 200-hour moving averages, the short-term bias tilts to the downside. While there has been some downside momentum, it has not yet accelerated aggressively. Still, sellers maintain the technical edge beneath those moving averages.
If traders begin to anticipate a trend-like break lower, the first downside trigger would come on a move below today’s low at $66,557. A sustained break below last Thursday’s low at $65,156 would further strengthen the bearish case. Below that, attention would turn toward the cycle low near $59,930 reached earlier this month — and potentially even lower if downside momentum accelerates.
On the other hand, consolidation does not eliminate the possibility of an upside breakout. If selling pressure fades, buyers would first need to reclaim the 100-hour moving average at $60,916 (as referenced in your framework). The would have traders looking toward the 38.2% retracement at $71,551 in the high that $72,174. Breaking above those levels would be a more meaningful bullish signal and could open the door toward the 50% retracement midpoint at $75,141.
For now, however, the technical posture favors the sellers while price remains below the 100- and 200-hour moving averages. The compression between price and those key averages suggests the market is building energy. Traders should anticipate a move away from this tightening range soon — and when it comes, it is likely to be more directional /trend-like than what we have seen over the past several sessions.
Be aware. Be prepared.
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Key Points
38.2% retracement at $71,551 remains firm resistance.
After rebounding from the February 6 low near $59,930, Bitcoin recovered 38.2% of the drop from the January 28 high at $90,352 — but that retracement has capped gains repeatedly. Staying below keeps sellers in control.Six failed breakout attempts.
Since the February 6 low, price has tried six times to push above $71,551. One brief move to $72,174 on February 8 was quickly rejected. Buyers had opportunities — and failed to sustain momentum.100- and 200-hour MAs are flat → Non-trending market.
The flattening of both moving averages signals a market lacking directional conviction. Consolidations like this typically transition into a stronger trend move.“Three’s a Crowd” compression.
Price and the 100- and 200-hour MAs have converged. This balance between buyers and sellers rarely lasts. Compression often precedes expansion — either sharply higher or lower.Short-term bias favors the downside.
With price below both moving averages, sellers maintain the technical edge.
Bearish Triggers
Break below $66,557 (today’s low)
Sustained move under $65,156 (last Thursday’s low)
Opens path toward $59,930 cycle low — and potentially lower
Bullish Requirements
Reclaim the 100-hour MA at $60,916
Break above $71,551 (38.2% retracement)
Clear $72,174 high
Targets the 50% retracement at $75,141
Bottom Line
The market is coiling. Compression between price and the key moving averages suggests energy is building.
Bias: Modestly bearish below the 100- and 200-hour MAs.
But consolidation does not last forever.
A trend-like move is likely coming.