Bitcoin price held steady around $70,404 this week as investor behavior shifted away from panic selling. On-chain data indicated rising stablecoin activity. At the same time, macroeconomic pressures from U.S. Federal Reserve policy and geopolitical tensions shaped sentiment.
CryptoQuant data indicated that Bitcoin price stability was aligned with a sharp rise in stablecoin transfers. USD Coin and Tether activity surged as traders rotated capital into lower-risk positions.
This shift occurred because markets reacted to reduced expectations of near-term rate cuts. Rising energy prices linked to the Israel-Iran conflict also contributed.
CryptoQuant records showed Bitcoin price moved sharply during the weekend before recovering into early week trading. The asset dropped 3.75% to $67,300 before rebounding above $71,700. This reflects sensitivity to geopolitical headlines and liquidity conditions.
Bitcoin Realized Volatility | Source: CryptoQuant
Realized volatility expanded across shorter time horizons, with three- and six-month measures rising to 107% and 148%, respectively.
These levels increased from 60% and 94.5% over the previous six months. However, one-year realized volatility remained near 180%, indicating the broader market avoided disorderly selling.
This reaction mirrored a cautious environment in which participants responded to macro risks without triggering widespread capitulation. Investors appeared to absorb price swings while maintaining exposure, suggesting controlled positioning rather than panic exits.
CryptoQuant data showed stablecoin flows surged sharply on March 22, marking a major shift in capital behavior. USD Coin transfers reached 368 billion, reflecting a 2,081% daily increase. On the other hand, Tether transfers on Ethereum hit 72 billion.
These flows pointed to active capital rotation rather than outright market exit. Traders moved funds into stablecoins as temporary reserves, creating liquidity buffers for potential re-entry.
This structure often appears during periods of uncertainty, when investors prioritize flexibility over directional exposure.
Bitcoin derivatives market pressure index. Source: CryptoQuant
At the same time, derivatives data confirmed a decline in speculative pressure. Market analytics platform velo.data showed Bitcoin open interest fell by $19 billion over six months. This indicates a reduction in leveraged positions.
Funding rates also cooled to 0.01% from earlier highs near 0.1%, occasionally turning negative. This shift suggested reduced demand for long exposure and a more balanced market structure. The perpetual futures premium traded below spot prices, reinforcing a cautious stance among traders.
Independent market observer Max Trades noted on X that Bitcoin price continued to face rejection at a key resistance zone. He stated that failure to reclaim this level would support a bearish bias and increase the likelihood of a move toward the range lows.
In a separate post, Max Trades argued that Bitcoin had not yet formed a macro bottom. He cited the absence of aggressive sell-side pressure and the presence of unswept liquidity at levels below current prices.
He added that bullish sentiment appeared prematurely, which often precedes further downside moves.
Derivatives market data showed the Bitcoin market entered a deleveraging phase despite price recovery. The Bitcoin Derivatives Market Pressure Index dropped toward the 25–26% range. This reflects reduced speculative activity.
This divergence occurred as Bitcoin price recovered from recent lows while leverage declined sharply. The structure suggested price gains were not driven by aggressive derivatives positioning but by spot-driven activity.
Lower leverage reduced the probability of cascading liquidations, which typically amplify volatility during stressed conditions. This environment allowed the market to stabilize while maintaining liquidity through stablecoin flows.
Source: CryptoQuant
Spot market participation remained subdued during this period. Exchange data showed Binance trading volumes were heading toward their lowest monthly levels since September 2023. Activity hovered near $52 billion.
These conditions aligned with previous low-engagement phases seen during the 2022–2023 bear market cycles. Market participants appeared cautious, holding capital in reserve rather than deploying aggressively into Bitcoin.
Bitcoin price faced resistance below a key supply zone identified by traders, with downside liquidity still intact. A confirmed reclaim of that level would shift momentum. At the same time, failure could push the price toward lower range support in the near term.
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