First, give sweeteners or directly dump the market? At 4:00 PM today, a silent battle for funds is about to unfold. As a crypto market analyst with seven years of experience, I will break down the real logic behind this market movement.
Approximately $27 billion in options contracts are about to expire, a volume that is enough to tighten market participants' nerves. Currently, Bitcoin is repeatedly testing around $87,250. Looking at the 4-hour chart, it seems the bears have the upper hand, but the long lower shadow left by a two-thousand-point "deep V" rebound suggests that the bulls are still gathering strength.
The question is: will this rally be a trap to escape or will it break downward directly? My straightforward judgment is—it's likely a "rally first, then kill" pattern, but the upward move may be kept relatively restrained.
Let's look at the details of the 4-hour K-line. The price has fallen from the high of $94,569.9 to the current level. $84,401.9 is the critical support line—do or die. On the MACD indicator, both DIF and DEA are negative, indicating bearish momentum is still being released. But the most noteworthy point is—at the low of $86,891.7, a clear hammer candlestick appears, indicating that there are quite a few buy orders waiting at the $87,000 level.
The bullish and bearish sentiments are completely opposing. The bears' confidence comes from the daily chart closing below $87,500 for three consecutive days, forming a resistance. The bulls, on the other hand, are holding onto the support represented by this long lower shadow, unwilling to give up easily. At 4:00 PM today, who can hold out until the end will depend on who has more substantial chips in hand.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
6 Likes
Reward
6
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
PessimisticLayer
· 12-27 03:52
First pull, then dump? I'm tired of this routine. Every time they claim to restrain the rally, but then they turn around and dump.
View OriginalReply0
CexIsBad
· 12-27 00:51
27 billion poured in, the big players are about to start their show again—first bloodsucking, then harvesting the leeks, the old routine.
View OriginalReply0
MysteryBoxOpener
· 12-27 00:51
Pulling up first then killing? I bet this move will break through directly; the big players have already exited.
View OriginalReply0
DaoDeveloper
· 12-27 00:50
tbh the 270B options expiry framing feels a bit theatrical... but let's examine the actual mechanics here. hammer formation at 86,891 is interesting—classically signals support seeking, though game theory gets tricky when you factor in liquidation cascades.
Reply0
BrokenRugs
· 12-27 00:36
Is it another pull and kill? I'm tired of this trick, brother. Who still believes it now?
View OriginalReply0
VitaliksTwin
· 12-27 00:29
Pulling and then killing is an old trick, but it definitely makes it easy to harvest the little guys.
First, give sweeteners or directly dump the market? At 4:00 PM today, a silent battle for funds is about to unfold. As a crypto market analyst with seven years of experience, I will break down the real logic behind this market movement.
Approximately $27 billion in options contracts are about to expire, a volume that is enough to tighten market participants' nerves. Currently, Bitcoin is repeatedly testing around $87,250. Looking at the 4-hour chart, it seems the bears have the upper hand, but the long lower shadow left by a two-thousand-point "deep V" rebound suggests that the bulls are still gathering strength.
The question is: will this rally be a trap to escape or will it break downward directly? My straightforward judgment is—it's likely a "rally first, then kill" pattern, but the upward move may be kept relatively restrained.
Let's look at the details of the 4-hour K-line. The price has fallen from the high of $94,569.9 to the current level. $84,401.9 is the critical support line—do or die. On the MACD indicator, both DIF and DEA are negative, indicating bearish momentum is still being released. But the most noteworthy point is—at the low of $86,891.7, a clear hammer candlestick appears, indicating that there are quite a few buy orders waiting at the $87,000 level.
The bullish and bearish sentiments are completely opposing. The bears' confidence comes from the daily chart closing below $87,500 for three consecutive days, forming a resistance. The bulls, on the other hand, are holding onto the support represented by this long lower shadow, unwilling to give up easily. At 4:00 PM today, who can hold out until the end will depend on who has more substantial chips in hand.