Bitcoin Rebounds, but Market Still on Thin Ice

Bitcoin staged a modest comeback over the weekend, clawing its way back to the $87,500 level after a sharp downturn earlier in the week rattled traders and triggered widespread liquidations.
Data shows the cryptocurrency hovering around $87,645, marking a 1.8% increase over the past 24 hours. The rebound follows Friday’s dip to roughly $81,000, one of the steepest drops of the cycle.
Other major tokens also showed signs of stabilization. Ether rose 0.5% to $2,834, XRP climbed 2.65% to $2.09, and Solana advanced 2.5% to $133. Overall, the digital asset market added about 1% during the same period.
Yet despite the bounce, analysts say the recovery has the hallmarks of a temporary reset rather than the beginning of a strong upward trend.
Vincent Liu, CIO at Kronos Research, described the move as a classic “post-flush” reaction, marked by shallow liquidity and fragmented market flows. According to Liu, bitcoin is likely to drift within a constrained band between $85,000 and $90,000 as traders attempt to regain footing.
Market sentiment remains shaky. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index ticked up to 13, slightly above the week’s low of 11, though it remains firmly in the “extreme fear” category, reflecting lingering caution across trading desks.
Rachael Lucas, an analyst at BTC Markets, echoed the view that the market structure is still delicate. Bitcoin holding above $86,000 is encouraging, she said, but a convincing move above $88,000 would be needed to signal a meaningful bottom. Failure to break that threshold could leave the door open for a retest of $80,000.
Short-term traders, Lucas noted, are still highly reactive to funding rate shifts and liquidation clusters, while long-term holders appear largely unfazed. Institutional investors, she added, are not exiting the market but rotating positions, with some ETF outflows reflecting risk management rather than a broader pullback from the asset class.
“Crypto remains compelling on a structural level,” Lucas said. “But in the near term, volatility is still the trade.”




