Bitcoin Just Did Something Big—and Wall Street Might Be Too Late to Notice
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In a week where markets buckled under pressure, Bitcoin (BTC) quietly made its move—and if you weren’t paying attention, you might have missed one of the most important shifts in crypto this year.
While Wall Street was reeling from a tech-led sell-off and gold stumbled in response to macro jitters, Bitcoin held firm above $80,000—a level it has refused to give up despite ETF outflows, recession fears, and global trade chaos.
And here’s the kicker: Bitcoin just decoupled from the Nasdaq and gold.
Bitcoin Breaks Free While Others Bleed
Over the last week, the Nasdaq cratered 10.02%, and gold slipped 1.52%. Stocks were hit by escalating US-China trade tensions, delayed Fed rate cuts, and broad recession warnings. Normally, crypto would’ve followed suit.
But not this time.
Bitcoin rose 1.29%—a move that caught analysts and traders off-guard. It’s not just a stat; it’s a potential shift in Bitcoin’s identity. For years, BTC has been dismissed as a high-beta tech proxy. This week, it said otherwise.
According to Santiment, the buzz across platforms like Reddit, X, and Telegram has exploded, with traders calling out the “decoupling moment”—the point when crypto stops shadowing Wall Street and starts forging its own narrative again.
Historically, these moments have sparked some of Bitcoin’s most explosive bull runs.
ETF Outflows Hint at Hesitation, But the Price Tells Another Story
Despite Bitcoin’s resilience, ETF flows tell a more complicated tale. Institutional investors aren’t fully on board just yet.
The US spot Bitcoin ETF market logged $165 million in outflows this past week, snapping a two-week streak of inflows.
- WisdomTree’s BTCW led the exits with $44.6 million.
- IBIT followed with $35.5 million.
- BITB and ARKB each saw more than $20 million in redemptions.
But not all was bearish—Grayscale’s mini trust, Fidelity’s FBTC, and Franklin’s EZBC recorded inflows. It’s a tug-of-war between institutional caution and selective accumulation.
Still, BTC remained above $83K, even closing at $83,424 on Saturday despite a slight dip of 0.48%. That kind of resilience—especially in the face of ETF outflows—speaks volumes.
Technicals Still Say “Caution,” But Bulls Are Eyeing the Breakout
Technically, Bitcoin isn’t out of the woods. It’s trading below both its 50-day and 200-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), which typically signal weakness. But here’s where it gets interesting.
If BTC breaks above the $86,263 resistance and clears the 200-day EMA, it could charge toward the 50-day EMA and even test $90,742.
On the downside, losing the $80K level opens up a retest of the March 11 low at $76,642. And if the bleeding deepens, $73,641 becomes the next critical support.
With the Relative Strength Index (RSI) hovering around 45.86, there’s still room for downside before Bitcoin hits oversold territory.
So while the chart says “wait,” the narrative says “watch closely.”
Is This Bitcoin’s Big Moment?
Global trade uncertainty. Hawkish Fed vibes. Stock markets in freefall.
And yet, Bitcoin stands tall.
This isn’t just a price move—it’s a signal. BTC is showing signs of becoming a macro hedge again, possibly even reclaiming its digital gold narrative. If ETF inflows return, if global tensions ease even slightly, and if the Bitcoin Act sees progress—Bitcoin could be staring down its next major breakout.
A run to $100K? It’s not off the table. But for now, the real story is this: Bitcoin is starting to move on its own again.
And that could change everything.
The post Bitcoin Just Did Something Big—and Wall Street Might Be Too Late to Notice appeared first on Coinfomania.
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