$BTC BTC High-Level Consolidation Follow-up Direction and Strategy
High-level consolidation of Bitcoin usually reflects a standoff between bulls and bears, with prices oscillating within a narrow range in the short term. If the price breaks through the upper resistance level, it may trigger a new round of increases, as institutional capital inflows or positive news can easily push for a breakout; if it breaks below the key support level, it may lead to a correction or even a trend reversal, necessitating caution against the risk of 'long-term consolidation leading to a drop'. The current market sentiment, technical indicators, and capital flow are crucial: if there is a sudden negative event or major players offload after a period of low volume consolidation, the probability of a decline increases; if accompanied by a breakout with increased volume, the upward momentum strengthens. Investors should be cautious and observant, setting dynamic profit-taking and stop-loss measures to control positions. Long-term holders can pay attention to fundamental support (such as ETF inflows and the halving effect), while short-term traders need to closely monitor trading volume and on-chain data to avoid high-leverage operations. Respond rationally to volatility and guard against sudden market reversals.