$BTC/USDT Analysis: Why Has It Become Harder to Analyze Bitcoin?
Hello everyone! This is the trader-analyst from CryptoRobotics, and welcome to the daily analysis.
Yesterday, our Bitcoin scenario flipped 180 degrees.
Lately, the statistical effectiveness of our analysis — which previously had a 90% success rate — has dropped by about half. Why is that?
To understand the situation, let’s look at BTC on the 4-hour timeframe with the Heatmap Volume indicator (which highlights significant volume deviations from the average and colors candles accordingly). Normally, the market moves between liquidity levels or volume clusters, with many colored candles (red and yellow) showing abnormal volume. These candles make analysis much easier by clearly showing buyer or seller dominance based on volume distribution.
However, during the most recent wave of buying, we’ve seen a sharp drop in volume — the chart is almost entirely gray. Bitcoin’s available supply is at a minimum, and there are no clear reference points. In these conditions, we are left relying only on wave analysis and the occasional cluster-based absorption.
We are now closer than ever to updating the all-time high (ATH). However, given the current volume conditions, any strong seller activity could trigger a major correction.
Sell Zones:
$107,000–$109,000 (volume anomalies).
Buy Zones:
$103,200–$102,000 (market sell absorption),
~$100,000 (pushing volumes),
$98,000–$97,200 (local support),
Level $93,000,
$91,500–$90,000 (strong buying imbalance),
$88,100–$87,000 (market sell absorption),
$85,500–$84,000 (accumulated volumes),
$82,700–$81,400 (volume zone),
Level $74,800,
$69,000–$60,600 (accumulated volumes).