

Bitcoin BTC$68,767.57 slid toward $68,000 on Tuesday, with traditional markets closed in Hong Kong for a long weekend, as repeated failures near $70,000 left the bitcoin market vulnerable to a break lower.
The drop came after another failed push above $70,000, with prices slipping quickly once they approached the lower end of the $65,000 to $73,000 range that has defined trading since late March. Intraday losses accelerated near that boundary, highlighting how little support exists when momentum turns.

(CoinDesk)
That calm is not being driven by strong demand. Recent Glassnode data shows softer trading volumes and subdued onchain activity even as prices recover, indicating limited participation behind the move.
Meanwhile, in a note to CoinDesk, crypto-native trading and liquidity firm Caladan pointed to negative demand trends and ongoing distribution by large holders, leaving bitcoin reliant on macro-driven flows and derivatives positioning rather than broad-based accumulation.
The result is a market that looks stable on the surface but is structurally fragile if that balance shifts.
That vulnerability is becoming more visible in derivatives markets. Options data shows traders are increasingly paying up for downside protection, with implied volatility holding above realized levels, a sign that investors are bracing for a larger move even as spot prices remain rangebound.
Analysts who spoke to CoinDesk earlier point to a negative gamma setup below roughly $68,000, where market makers may be forced to sell bitcoin as prices fall in order to hedge their exposure.
The danger: this dynamic can accelerate declines, transforming a gradual move into a sharper, self-reinforcing rout that could drag prices toward the $60,000 level if support breaks.
Prediction markets reflect a similar shift in sentiment. On Polymarket, traders are assigning a 68% probability that bitcoin will trade at or below $65,000 in April, while higher targets such as $80,000 have seen sharply declining odds.
Taken together, the signals point to a market where the calm may hold, but only until key levels give way.
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Bitcoin is falling because repeated failures to break above $70,000 have left the market vulnerable to a lower move. The article says demand is weakening, trading volumes are softer, and large holders are still distributing coins.
Bitcoin has been trading in a roughly $65,000 to $73,000 range since late March. The article says prices slipped quickly when they approached the lower end of that band.
Both point to weak demand conditions. Glassnode data shows softer volumes and subdued onchain activity, while Caladan says negative demand trends and whale selling are leaving Bitcoin dependent on macro flows and derivatives rather than broad accumulation.
Traders are worried because options markets are pricing more downside protection and implied volatility is above realized volatility. The article also says there may be a negative gamma setup below about $68,000, which could force market makers to sell as prices fall and intensify the decline.
The article says a sharper selloff could drag Bitcoin toward $60,000 if key support levels fail. It also notes that Polymarket traders are giving a 68% probability that Bitcoin will trade at or below $65,000 in April.






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