Bitcoin is holding above $63,000 following a 4% Sunday rally, with price now hovering near the 200-week simple moving average — a level that has historically served as a long-term support and a major battleground between bulls and bears at cycle turning points. The move was partly spurred by Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor hinting at further BTC purchases, a signal markets take seriously given the firm's track record of aggressive accumulation.
Why it matters
The 200-week MA is not just a technical line — it is the level that defined the floor in mid-2022, and the current setup is drawing direct comparisons. Alex Kuptsikevich, chief market analyst at FxPro, noted that the sentiment index has plummeted back to single-digit values: "The situation resembles mid-2022. Under similar conditions at that time, the downward momentum weakened, but a full-fledged reversal did not occur until many months later." That framing tempers the bullish read: stabilization is not the same as a confirmed bottom.
Market impact
BTC futures open interest collapsed to 716,000 BTC from a record 901,000 BTC just four days ago, reflecting forced long liquidations rather than aggressive new short positioning — a structurally cleaner setup for recovery. Implied volatility has retreated, with the 30-day BVIV index pulling back to 50% from a Friday peak near 59%. Options flow on Deribit is skewing bullish, with the five most-traded instruments all calls, including a $170,000 strike expiring December 25. One risk remains: dealer gamma dynamics around the $60,000 level could amplify swings in either direction if price revisits that zone.
CoinDesk