Currently, the market is stuck in a narrow trading range, with liquidity concentrated in two main zones. Above, selling pressure appears heavily around the 96,000 – 98,000 region, indicating this is an area where sellers are ready to unload aggressively whenever the price moves up. Each time it hits this zone, the upward momentum is quickly halted. Conversely, below, an important support zone is forming around 88,000 – 90,000. The volume of buy orders accumulating here is increasing, reflecting a market psychology ready to catch the bottom. Every correction back to this area attracts buy support to push the price up. The confrontation between these two “liquidity walls” causes the price to move sideways, with slow oscillations, noise, and a lack of clear trend. In such phases, false breakouts are very common, and impatient traders can be swept into hasty decisions. Only when one of the two major liquidity zones is completely swept—either the selling pressure above is fully absorbed, or the buying force below is broken through—will the market likely enter a period of significant volatility. Until then, consolidation and fluctuation will remain the main scenario. In other words, liquidity will be the key factor determining the market’s next major direction, not short-term emotions or rumors.
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📈 The Funds Deciding the Next Move of the Market
Currently, the market is stuck in a narrow trading range, with liquidity concentrated in two main zones. Above, selling pressure appears heavily around the 96,000 – 98,000 region, indicating this is an area where sellers are ready to unload aggressively whenever the price moves up. Each time it hits this zone, the upward momentum is quickly halted.
Conversely, below, an important support zone is forming around 88,000 – 90,000. The volume of buy orders accumulating here is increasing, reflecting a market psychology ready to catch the bottom. Every correction back to this area attracts buy support to push the price up.
The confrontation between these two “liquidity walls” causes the price to move sideways, with slow oscillations, noise, and a lack of clear trend. In such phases, false breakouts are very common, and impatient traders can be swept into hasty decisions.
Only when one of the two major liquidity zones is completely swept—either the selling pressure above is fully absorbed, or the buying force below is broken through—will the market likely enter a period of significant volatility. Until then, consolidation and fluctuation will remain the main scenario.
In other words, liquidity will be the key factor determining the market’s next major direction, not short-term emotions or rumors.