Bitcoin

Bitcoin Price Breakout Failed— Rally To Resume Above $115,000?

Bitcoin (BTC) spent most of October moving sideways, gaining barely 1.5% across the month. Over the past week, though, the Bitcoin price has climbed nearly 5%, bringing the focus back to a possible bullish reversal.

Earlier this week, Bitcoin briefly crossed $113,200 before getting rejected near $115,000 — a zone that now defines the line between hesitation and renewed strength. The rejection looked sudden, but the data shows it was expected. And if one key level gives way, the recovery could be, too.

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Why The Breakout Failed

The first signal came from on-chain behavior rather than the charts. CryptoQuant’s Spent Output Value Bands, which track how much Bitcoin each holder group moves to exchanges, showed a sharp rise in selling pressure between October 25 and 28.

The 100–1,000 BTC group (sharks) raised their exchange transfers from 1,046 BTC to 7,191 BTC, while the 1,000–10,000 BTC group (whales) added around 3,250 BTC during the same time.

Bitcoin Whales Dumping: CryptoQuant

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Such inflows often mean profit-taking or short-term hedging. Together, these moves flooded exchanges with supply right as Bitcoin tested $115,000, capping the Bitcoin price move and stopping what could have been a clean continuation.

Bitcoin Price Chart
Bitcoin Price Chart: TradingView

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This wave of large-holder activity explains why the breakout attempt stalled despite strong retail optimism.

Why The Setup Still Holds

Even after that sell pressure, Bitcoin’s foundation looks steady. Glassnode’s Holder Accumulation Ratio (HAR), which tracks how many wallets add to their BTC balance, remains firm at 60.2%.

Any reading above 50% means the market is in net accumulation, showing that long-term holders are still quietly buying. While it’s slightly below the recent three-month high near 63%, the data confirms the broader buying trend hasn’t broken.

Bitcoin Accumulation Ongoing
Bitcoin Accumulation Ongoing: Glassnode

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This behavior matters because it offsets short-term selling from whales.

As long-term holders absorb the coins moving to exchanges, it prevents deeper pullbacks and keeps the structure stable. That’s what keeps the door open for a renewed push if momentum returns.

Bitcoin Price Structure And Why The Recovery Is Expected

Bitcoin’s current setup still follows a clear technical structure, an inverse head and shoulders pattern, which often signals a shift from selling to buying momentum. The formation remains valid as long as BTC holds above $106,600, which acts as the base of the pattern.

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The Relative Strength Index (RSI), an indicator that measures how strong buying or selling momentum is, first flashed a hidden bearish divergence between October 13 and 26, right around the time the breakout attempt formed.

During that period, the Bitcoin price made a lower high, while RSI made a higher high, signaling that momentum was weakening even as traders pushed the price up.

Bitcoin Price Analysis
Bitcoin Price Analysis: TradingView

That imbalance was the reason many expected a possible breakout failure near $115,000. And that’s exactly what followed — a rejection and short-term correction.

Now, the divergence has flattened out, meaning RSI and the Bitcoin price are moving in sync again. This stabilization shows that sellers are losing steam and that the setup for recovery is building strength. However, $115,000 remains the key test. It’s the level that capped the last breakout and will decide whether this pattern continues to evolve higher.

If Bitcoin closes decisively above it, the neckline breakout could open the path toward $117,300 and $125,900 (near BTC’s peak). That would be an 11% gain from the current zone. If the BTC price fails and slips below $106,600, that would invalidate the bullish setup. It could even send BTC toward $103,500.

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