The token has traded in a tight band near $59,000 to $60,000 all week. The pattern echoes a calm stretch from 2024, but this one is forming below support in a falling market, and a break could open the way toward $40,000.

  • Bitcoin has traded in a tight range around $59,000 to $60,000 for five days, a pattern analysts say is risky because it is occurring below key support levels and downward-sloping 50- and 200-day moving averages.
  • Some analysts warn that if this consolidation breaks lower, bitcoin could slide toward $40,000.
  • Market sentiment is being pressured by Strategy’s plan to potentially sell more than $1 billion of its bitcoin reserves, a stronger dollar, and a rotation of capital into U.S. stocks on optimism over AI spending.

The range itself is normal. Bitcoin spent much of 2024, from March to October, consolidating between $55,000 and $70,000 with occasional overshoots in both directions. What makes the current setup riskier is its location, said Alex Kuptsikevich, chief market analyst at FxPro, in an email to CoinDesk.

This band sits below the levels that sparked rebounds in February and early this month, as well as the 50-day and 200-day moving averages. Traders closely watch the two averages, and both are sloping downward right now, indicating a bearish bias.

And that is the signature of a downtrend rather than a market building a base to climb from.

"This is a rather dangerous consolidation for the bulls," Kuptsikevich said, noting that the 2024 version formed in a rising market while this one is forming in a falling one. If the pattern breaks lower rather than resolving higher, he said, the next meaningful step down is around $40,000.

Some onchain indicators suggest the same. Pseudonymous CryptoQuant analyst Darkfost flagged signs that long-term holders are starting to capitulate, or selling at a loss. In past cycles, this phase has marked attractive entry points for buyers, even as it signals near-term pain.

The picture fits a market where demand has stayed soft. Active addresses and transaction activity have hovered near the low end of their recent ranges through the slide, as CoinDesk reported earlier Tuesday.

The pressure on Strategy adds to the unease.

The largest corporate holder of bitcoin saw its preferred stock, STRC, hit a record low near $71 last week, while its common stock fell 25% over the week to its lowest level since February 2024.

The company has since said it may sell more than a billion dollars in bitcoin to shore up its finances, a dramatic shift from founder Michael Saylor's "never sell" mantra. The board has authorized management to sell from the reserve at any time rather than approving each sale separately.

The prospect of a large seller hangs over an already thin market. The macro backdrop offers little help. The U.S. dollar has been rising, and strength in the greenback typically hurts bitcoin and other dollar-denominated assets.

As of this writing, BTC appears on track to end the second quarter with a 13% loss. U.S. stocks, by contrast, are closing one of their best quarters in years on optimism over AI spending, the same rotation that has pulled capital toward equities and away from crypto all month.

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