As the year comes to an end, Bitcoin faces not only technical pressure but also the challenge of a significant contraction in market liquidity.



The current market exhibits typical year-end characteristics: institutional investors are gradually taking holidays, trading volume has noticeably declined, and profit-taking is rushing to cash out before the year ends. In this environment, any small-scale selling pressure could trigger a chain reaction. From a fundamental perspective, ETF fund outflows continue, indicating that institutions are not optimistic about the future market outlook.

The technical signals are even clearer. Bitcoin has attempted to break the 90,000 level multiple times without success, forming a typical bearish alignment pattern. Once the support level below is broken, it could trigger an accelerated decline. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve's rate cut expectations are uncertain, directly affecting market risk appetite—funds are rapidly flowing into traditional safe-haven assets like gold.

$BTC $SUI $DOGE and other mainstream assets are facing similar liquidity difficulties. Many analysts believe that 80,000 may not be the bottom, but merely a relay point in the downward process. In such a market environment, bottom-fishing requires extra caution.
BTC0,71%
SUI-0,69%
DOGE0,08%
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GasFeeBeggarvip
· 10h ago
The selling pressure at the end of the year is really intense, institutions have all gone on holiday, and liquidity just disappeared. It feels like 90,000 is just a trap; the signal that it can't break through is too obvious. 80,000 may not be the bottom either; we still need to wait and see. In this kind of market, trying to buy the dip is just gambling, so I choose to stay on the sidelines. Gold is stealing our money; institutions have all moved to safe havens.
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FancyResearchLabvip
· 10h ago
In theory, liquidity contraction at the end of the year is the main reason for the decline in coin prices, but our Luban No.7 is back under construction... This time, it directly locks itself in the 90,000 support level. Locked in again, is 80,000 really the bottom? Let's do a small experiment and see. It's just another useless innovation... Saying that institutional pessimistic expectations are at play, but actually it's just trying to scare retail investors into buying the dip. This contract is a bit interesting, ETF outflows, Federal Reserve swings, safe-haven assets rising... Maximum academic value, minimum practical value. Year-end cash-out? But I want to wait for us to take over, I'll first test how deep this smart trap really is. Now I’ve become proficient—talking about liquidity when prices fall, and talking about technical breakthroughs when prices rise, haha.
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WalletDivorcervip
· 10h ago
End-of-year institutions are on holiday, so the market is like this. But I think it needs to drop further before I can buy the dip. Is 80,000 really the bottom? It still feels early. Institutions are fleeing, so we shouldn't rush to buy in either. This wave of liquidity exhaustion feels similar to last year; the tactics are the same. If 90,000 can't be broken, the support below is also worrying. We really need to be cautious.
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StablecoinGuardianvip
· 10h ago
The liquidity contraction at the end of the year is really intense. Institutions have all gone on vacation—who will step in to buy the dip? If it doesn't break 90,000, it has to go lower. Don't rush to buy the dip, really. The ETF outflow signal is too obvious. The era of making quick money is over. 80,000 may not be the bottom either; let's wait and see. This market is now just a cash machine, with institutions in the rhythm of raising funds.
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Gm_Gn_Merchantvip
· 10h ago
End of year, institutions are on holiday, liquidity has dried up, and this is the easiest time to crash the market. Wait, is gold absorbing funds? Should we take a look at the precious metals sector? The 90,000 level can't be broken, and it's repeatedly tested. It feels like 80,000 is really not the bottom. As for bottom-fishing, I think we should wait a bit longer. Entering now is too risky. The institutional cash-out wave has arrived. Small investors should just watch the show obediently. Honestly, ETFs are still fleeing. How optimistic can this signal be?
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