
BlockBeats News, January 27th, Wintermute stated that after Bitcoin failed to reach a high of $97,000 in early January, it is still fluctuating in the $85,000-$94,000 range. Last week, ETF funds saw historically high net outflows, coupled with Coinbase’s premium turning into a discount, indicating that U.S. selling pressure is driving the market. Despite the market’s weakness last week, the overall cryptocurrency market has not shown a clear directional trend in the past two months, remaining in a range-bound state. Meanwhile, as the U.S. dollar weakens, the market is betting on currency devaluation, with gold and silver hitting new all-time highs. At a crucial moment, Bitcoin’s “digital gold” narrative has not yet materialized, at least not for now. Volatility remains very low. Cross-asset rotation is currently taking place.
The $85,000 price level has been repeatedly tested, either forming a very strong bottom or representing a “trap” that has not yet been triggered. Despite the continuous outflow of U.S. funds and compressed volatility, the price is still holding at this level, indicating that there is buying support in the market, albeit not very aggressive. Gold is doing “what Bitcoin should be doing.” U.S. stocks are waiting for earnings reports to validate current valuations. Bitcoin is in a “no man’s land” state: not weak enough to fall further, but not strong enough to regain momentum.
If the Federal Reserve intervenes in the yen and the U.S. dollar continues to weaken, this will be a clear catalyst for risk assets. If the “Big Seven” of U.S. stocks show strong earnings, the AI narrative is maintained, and the Nasdaq rises, it will also drive the cryptocurrency market upwards. Conversely, if Powell takes a hawkish stance or if trade tensions escalate again, there will be substantial downward pressure retesting the $85,000 support level.



