Quick Take
  • The Bitcoin price saw a short-term rebound after slipping to recent lows, gaining nearly 5% from its late-January bottom to test the $76,980 zone.
  • This BTC price move followed a bullish momentum setup on the 4-hour chart, where selling pressure appeared to weaken.
  • At first glance, the BTC rebound looked technically justified.
  • A familiar short-term pattern had played out before.

What Happened

When price approaches these zones, selling pressure often increases as investors look to exit without losses.

At the same time, the Spent Output Profit Ratio (SOPR) is hovering near yearly lows. SOPR measures whether coins are being sold at a profit or a loss. A value below 1 means investors are realizing losses.

Market Context

The Bitcoin price saw a short-term rebound after slipping to recent lows, gaining nearly 5% from its late-January bottom to test the $76,980 zone. This BTC price move followed a bullish momentum setup on the 4-hour chart, where selling pressure appeared to weaken.

At first glance, the BTC rebound looked technically justified. A familiar short-term pattern had played out before. But a closer look at on-chain and market structure data shows that three major metrics are now questioning whether this bounce can develop into a sustained recovery.

During this period, the price of BTC made a lower low, while the Relative Strength Index (RSI), a momentum indicator, formed a higher low. This pattern often appears when selling pressure starts fading and short-term rebounds, albeit on a shorter timeframe, become likely.

The BTC price bounce also had macro backing, as mentioned by Martin Gaspar, Senior Crypto Market Strategist at FalconX. He attributed the move to a rotation from precious metals, right before the divergence flashed:

“Given Friday’s blow-off top in metals, traders may be anticipating a rotation back to crypto. While BTC had previously been seen as a beneficiary of strength in gold, capital that may have flowed to crypto off such moves instead funneled to silver in recent months. This could revert as silver cools off,” he said.

The first metric questioning the rebound is the UTXO Realized Price Distribution (URPD), which maps where large portions of Bitcoin’s supply last moved.

Now, the latest rebound has once again stopped near another supply-heavy zone. This suggests that rebounds are being capped by holders, possibly selling into resistance rather than building new positions. Without enough fresh demand, these sell walls remain difficult to clear.

Instead of coins leaving exchanges for long-term holding, more Bitcoin is now being moved back onto trading platforms. This usually reflects growing readiness to sell rather than accumulate.

Why It Matters

Chart Setup That Pointed to a 5% Bounce

On the 4-hour timeframe, Bitcoin formed a bullish divergence between January 31 and February 3.

Details

A similar divergence appeared earlier between January 20 and January 30. That setup led to a rally toward $84,640 before sellers took control again.

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This time, the pattern produced a rebound of nearly 5%, lifting Bitcoin toward $76,980. The move followed the same technical script as before, reinforcing the idea that the bounce was structurally valid.

But technical setups only work when buyers continue supporting them. And this is where the first major challenge appears.

Metric One — URPD Shows Strong Sell Walls at Key BTC Levels

URPD data shows that the area near $76,990 contains around 0.46% of the total supply. This makes it a notable supply cluster, where many holders are sitting near their break-even levels. That explains why the recent 5% bounce stalled at $76,980.

This pattern has already appeared once before.

The earlier BTC rebound in late January (mentioned earlier) stalled near $84,640, close to the URPD zone, showing a massive 3.05% supply cluster. That wall proved too strong to break.

Rising Exchange Reserves and Weak SOPR Show Low Conviction

The second and third metrics come from exchange flows and profit behavior, and together they paint a concerning picture.

Bitcoin exchange reserves hit a recent low of 2.718 million BTC on January 19. Since then, reserves have climbed to about 2.752 million BTC.

That is an increase of roughly 34,000 BTC, or around 1.2% in less than three weeks.