The Bitcoin price is currently sitting on a key support trendline that could determine its next major move. According to a crypto analyst, a breakout from this level could lead to two possible scenarios.
Bitcoin is scheduled to fork in August 2026, and for the first time, the entities holding a great deal of coins are not retail traders but exchange-traded fund (ETF) sponsors, corporate treasuries like Strategy, and regulated custodians sitting on more than two million BTC.
The Fed maintains interest rates in a range of 3.5% to 3.75% with a split vote. Bitcoin briefly retreated below $75,000 following the official announcement. Analysts suggest that the Clarity Act legislation will be the next major bullish catalyst.
Bitcoin's latest rally is coming under pressure as weakening trading activity raises fresh doubts.
Bitcoin is holding above $76,000 as the market tests resistance and the broader environment remains uncertain.
Bitcoin is holding above $76,000 as the market tests resistance, and bulls attempt to build the momentum needed for the next leg higher. The price is constructive.
On-chain data and ETF outflows point to growing selling pressure around Bitcoin's key resistance zone.
For most of its history, Bitcoin has behaved like a predictable cyclical clock. Approximately every four years, the reward miners receive for each block is cut in half. That halving triggered, with surprising regularity, a bull market lasting between twelve and eighteen months, followed by an equally intense collapse.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel told the Bitcoin 2026 Conference in Las Vegas on April 27 that Bitcoin developers who write code without knowingly helping third parties commit crimes will not be investigated or charged,
Bitcoin dropped under $75,000 after FOMC minutes showed the US Federal Reserve holding interest rates and expressing slight concerns over inflation and the war in Iran.
Bitcoin tests its STH Realized Price resistance as bulls target a sustained close above the $80,000 zone.
Can Bitcoin bulls withstand the 'sell in May and go away' historical trend this summer?