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Bitcoin faces a critical point at $68.3K: bearish acceleration or historic buying signal?
As the weekly close approaches, Bitcoin is caught between two extreme scenarios. With a current price of $68,860 (+4.58% in 24 hours), the leading cryptocurrency is navigating a critical technical decision zone that, according to experts, will determine whether the market accelerates upward or confirms a continuation of the recent bearish trend.
Technical analysis indicates that Bitcoin’s next move will depend on its ability to hold or regain a specific level: around $68,300. This level is not arbitrary. It is the point where two major technical indicators converge: the 200-week exponential moving average (EMA) and the 200-week simple moving average (SMA), which together form what analysts call a critical support “cloud.”
The key 200-week line marks the direction of acceleration
Historically, Bitcoin has treated the 200-week moving average as a decisive technical level. Currently, the price is right at this inflection point after falling below $60,000 just days ago. Bulls faced an initial obstacle: resistance at $69,000, a level reminiscent of the 2021 all-time high.
However, what now captures analysts’ attention is what happens if Bitcoin fails to close above that 200-week line. According to Rekt Capital, a well-known trader and technical researcher, history offers clear lessons on this scenario.
“If Bitcoin closes the week below $68,300 and then touches this line again as resistance (not support), we could be looking at the prelude to further bearish acceleration,” he explained in his published analyses. Historically, when the price is rejected after breaking key long-term technical lines, it often triggers a wave of selling pressure that feeds on itself. That’s why the weekly close is so crucial in determining the next move.
Historical signals: Mayer Multiple screams BTC is cheap
Contrasting the bearish scenario, there’s another side that institutional investors cannot ignore. The Mayer Multiple, one of the most respected price indicators in Bitcoin’s history, is sending an almost unprecedented message.
William Clemente, head of strategy at Styx platform, along with multiple analysts, agree that both the Mayer Multiple and the 200-week moving average are in “long-term accumulation territory.” What does this mean? That Bitcoin is extraordinarily cheap from a historical perspective.
The data is compelling: only 5.3% of all days in Bitcoin’s history have seen a Mayer Multiple that low. This indicator, which measures the distance between the current price and the 200-day moving average, generally signals excellent buying opportunities when below 0.8. The current level places Bitcoin in territory not seen since the 2022 bear market, which marked the bottom before the bullish recovery of 2023.
Charles Edwards, founder of the quantitative fund Capriole Investments, was straightforward: “Rarely does the Mayer Multiple fall to 0.6x. Can the price go lower? Yes, but historically these are some of the best buy signals in Bitcoin’s entire history.”
The dilemma: acceleration versus accumulation
What emerges from these analyses is a fundamental tension. The bearish acceleration is a real technical risk if Bitcoin cannot sustain the $68,300 level. However, simultaneously, the historical value indicators scream that prices are at extremely attractive levels for long-term buyers.
This week, the market will decide which of these two forces prevails: the technical downward pressure or the value-driven accumulation that typically occurs in cryptocurrencies when multiples fall to these extremes. What’s clear is that Bitcoin is at one of its most uncertain moments and, at the same time, one of its best entry opportunities for investors with a long-term horizon.