Bitcoin retreats toward $68,000 as declining demand meets increased whale selling.

Bitcoin moved lower toward $68,000 on Tuesday, as another failed attempt to reclaim $70,000 left the market vulnerable to a sharper decline.

The drop accelerated near the lower boundary of the $65,000–$73,000 range that has held since late March, exposing weak support levels.

Despite the relatively calm price action, demand remains fragile. Glassnode data shows declining volumes and subdued onchain activity, indicating that recent price stability lacks strong backing.

Caladan highlighted continued selling by large holders and soft demand conditions, leaving the market dependent on macro-driven flows rather than broad investor participation.

Derivatives markets are signaling rising risk. Options data shows traders increasingly paying for downside protection, with implied volatility remaining elevated.

Analysts warn of a negative gamma setup below $68,000, where hedging activity could force market makers to sell into weakness, amplifying any decline.

This feedback loop could accelerate a move toward $60,000 if key support levels break.

Meanwhile, prediction markets reflect growing caution, with traders assigning higher odds to downside scenarios and scaling back expectations for a major rally.

Together, these signals suggest bitcoin’s current stability may be temporary, with risks skewed to the downside if market conditions shift.

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