Bitcoin (BTC) is hovering near the $86,500 mark on Wednesday after rebounding from a sharp selloff earlier in the week, as easing forced liquidations and selective dip-buying helped the world’s largest cryptocurrency claw back losses. As crypto faces one of the biggest downward trends of the year, analysts say the recovery still looks fragile, as BTC struggles to reclaim the $88,500-$89,000 resistance zone decisively.
A CoinSwitch Markets Desk commentary says BTC bounced about 3% after Monday’s sharp selloff as heavy forced selling eased and traders stepped in near the $85-$86,000 support zone. “In the short term, the rebound looks more like a relief bounce than a full trend reversal. BTC needs stronger spot buying to sustain upside. Technically, resistance sits around $88K–$88.5K, while support lies near $87K.”
Riya Sehgal, research analyst at Delta Exchange, said Bitcoin is staying above $85,000 despite $358 million in ETF outflows, indicating investors are cautious but not exiting the market. “On-chain data shows wallets holding 100–1,000 BTC added about 54,000 BTC this week, the fastest accumulation since 2012. The contrast between ETF redemptions and steady accumulation points to a more mature market.”
Despite a 31% correction from October highs, Bitcoin’s volatility and its shifting correlation with gold show it still functions as a hedge in uncertain macro conditions.
Sehgal said technically, Bitcoin is consolidating below $88,500, with key resistance at $89,350, and a breakout above this could lift prices toward $90,000–$91,200, while support sits at $86,500–$85,000. “Ethereum faces resistance near $3,025–$3,050, with downside support around $2,875–$2,840. Both assets remain in a corrective phase,” she said.
