Great call I guess as we have not moved further since the start of Feburary but the problem is we havent moved higher either. That single week of range at the Feb start contains entire the BTC price action ever since, we're caught within the net of the volume traded at that time.
I have a theory about that, and that one could be another confirmation for strong support in the low 60s.
Assumption: Most traders think that at 60k, Bitcoin is undervalued, and this leads to strong support in that area. The 60s were only reached due to a cascade of liquidations when the 80k bottom from November/December and then the 74k bottom from last March were broken.
Possible confirmation of the assumption: Even if the Iran war has escalated to levels not seen in years in this area (and clearly further than in the early 2025 attacks) the Bitcoin price didn't hit lower lows. This includes the oil price spike last weekend, which only led to action in the 65k area. This means that there is enough buy volume in that area that an attempt to break further down in the 60k area and below, even with extreme levels of fear, is difficult for the "shorters" camp.
This is not untrue, it's just not enough. What we are seeing right now is that, whenever it reaches 60k, people think that it's undervalued, that part is true. But why do they think like that? Because anytime we go down, we go up, and that means that we all know the price will recover eventually if we just let it be, so when the price goes down a lot, we buy, because we believe that it will go up. What can change that? What if we go down, and then keep going down because there is a sell pressure?
It's not impossible for it to happen, or what if we just fail to go up, and stay low? It's all possible. They are possible because that is literally what happened, and I doubt it will change anytime soon, we will still drop in price eventually.