Kimi|4月 05, 2026 07:39
Every time $BTC hits a certain low during a bear market, the market starts to experience intense, repeated fluctuations.
First, it drops, then rebounds, drops again, rebounds again—the goal is to shake out those hesitant funds.
At the beginning, the ups and downs are relatively easier to predict, but the further it goes, the harder it becomes to distinguish between real and fake moves.
For example, after Bitcoin rebounded from $60K, dipped again, and then rebounded once more, everyone could see what was happening.
But later, when it suddenly dropped from $71K, many thought a new round of declines had started. Yet during the holidays, it held steady around $66K–$67K.
If the price quickly dips to $63K next and then rebounds, it’s very likely that it’ll shoot up to $72K to liquidate the shorts, and only then will it truly turn downward.
In simple terms: the big players are repeatedly shaking out the market. Don’t rush to judge the trend—short-term moves might fake a dip, then surge, and finally drop for real.
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