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$BTC at $72,242, do you dare to buy the dip?
Morgan Stanley personally launches an ETF, Iran plans to use Bitcoin to collect tolls on oil tankers, retail investors “little shrimps” and “crabs” are疯狂加仓— but what about the price? After halving from the all-time high of 126k, it has been sideways for a full two months, like a half-dead fish, occasionally flopping, then sinking back down. Is this short-term bull market already over? Should Bitcoin be laid to rest?
First, look at the surface: good news piled up like mountains, price steady as a dog.
In the past 24 hours, BTC rose 0.25%, climbing from 72k to 72,242, an increase of a few hundred dollars. But the candlestick chart shows it just dropped from 126k, bouncing within the 65k-75k range for two months. RSI is neutral, MACD still tangled near the zero line, volume gently increased but not explosive. Technical analysis tells you: no clear direction, don’t get overly excited.
First thing: institutions are crazy, banks are personally entering the market.
Morgan Stanley, one of the largest investment banks in the US, launched its own spot Bitcoin ETF, with a fee of only 0.14%, cheaper than BlackRock. This means that traditional bank clients who previously dared not touch Bitcoin can now buy it with a tap on their phone. Also, Iran is preparing to impose crypto tolls on oil tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
Second thing: retail investors are quietly accumulating.
“Little shrimps” and “crabs”—retail investors holding less than 10 Bitcoins—have made their largest accumulation since the drop last October.
Third thing: miners can’t hold on anymore, but that’s a good thing.
Some miners’ production costs have exceeded Bitcoin’s selling price, leading to shutdowns and forced sales. In the short term, this is selling pressure; in the long term, it’s cleansing. Every time miners collectively “surrender,” it’s one of the signals of a bottom.
On one side: institutions entering, retail accumulation, geopolitical demand.
On the other side: ETF outflows, high inflation, miner sell-offs.
Key level: 70,000, the dividing line between bulls and bears.
If you are a short-term trader: buy the dip in batches around 70,500-71,000, targeting 73,500, with a stop at 69,800. If today’s CPI data exceeds expectations, reverse and short at any time; if below expectations, switch directly to long.
If you are a long-term investor: buy in batches between 68,000-70,000, add more if it drops to 66,000. ETFs have already net inflows of $53 billion in the 65k-72k range, and institutions are telling you with real money: they don’t think this position is expensive.
Bitcoin halved from 126k, sideways for a while, everyone is panicking. But have you ever thought—why did Morgan Stanley choose to launch an ETF at this moment?
Because they know, volatility is an opportunity for smart money to build positions. #Gate广场四月发帖挑战 $BTC