Bitcoin briefly surged past $75,000 to a six-week high before quickly retreating, highlighting the lack of durability behind the latest rally.
The cryptocurrency climbed to around $75,912 early Tuesday—its highest level since Feb. 4—but failed to hold those gains, slipping back below $75,000 during Asian trading hours. The sharp move higher was largely driven by derivatives activity rather than strong spot demand.
Analysis from 10x Research indicates the rally was powered by the unwinding of bearish positions linked to $60,000 put options. As traders closed these downside hedges, market makers who had taken the opposite side were forced to rebalance their exposure—often by buying bitcoin—creating flows that briefly pushed prices higher.
However, the advance quickly lost momentum. The absence of meaningful call option buying suggests the move was not backed by fresh bullish positioning, but instead driven by short covering and hedge unwinds.
The pullback extended across the broader market. Ethereum, XRP, Solana, BNB and Dogecoin all retreated from their session highs, while the CoinDesk 20 Index dropped back to around 2,162 after earlier reaching 2,202.
Bitcoin also failed to maintain a foothold above $74,400, a level that has shifted from previous support to near-term resistance. That zone had helped stabilize the market in April 2025 before paving the way for a rally to record highs later in the year.
The rejection at this level suggests it may act as a ceiling in the near term, with traders closely monitoring price action around it. More broadly, the episode underscores how key technical levels continue to influence market behavior, with participants remaining cautious about chasing rallies without a clear catalys





















