Bitcoin fails again at $71,500 as weakening momentum raises risk of a deeper pullback

Bitcoin fails again at $71,500 as weakening momentum raises risk of a deeper pullback

Bitcoin has again failed to hold $71,500, reinforcing the level as a long-term ceiling while global markets shift into a risk-off environment driven by rising oil prices and higher bond yields.

The latest rejection came after Bitcoin briefly rose past $73,000, then lost momentum and fell back below $71,500.

Bitcoin price chart showing BTC rejection near $73,000 and a drop below the $71,500 support level.
Bitcoin price chart showing BTC rejection near $73,000 and a drop below the $71,500 support level.

The move extends a pattern that has now played out several times in recent sessions: price rallies into the same resistance zone, stalls, and reverses. The seventh attempt carried an additional signal. Instead of pressing directly into the ceiling, the rally printed a lower high before reaching it. Buyers slowed down earlier in the move.

Bitcoin failing 7 times to break $71,500 is much more ominous than boring ‘sideways action’
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Bitcoin failing 7 times to break $71,500 is much more ominous than boring ‘sideways action’

The market printed a lower high during its latest run which suggests that buyers are finally getting tired.

Feb 10, 2026 · Liam 'Akiba' Wright

Markets tend to break resistance when pressure builds underneath it. When attempts weaken, traders begin to treat the level differently.

That shift is already visible. Short sellers lean against the ceiling. Longs tighten risk near the same number that keeps rejecting price. Momentum fades candle by candle.

Bitcoin now trades in the middle of a clearly defined structure: $71,500 overhead as resistance, and a ladder of support shelves beginning around $68,000.

$71,500 returns as the market’s pressure test

The $71,500 level carries historical weight.

During mid-2025, it marked the upper boundary of a multi-month trading zone. When Bitcoin finally broke above that ceiling, the breakout accelerated into the rally that ultimately carried the asset to roughly $126,000 by October.

Markets often remember those breakout points. When price revisits them later in a cycle, the level becomes a place where traders reassess positions.

Bitcoin chart showing multiple failed attempts to break above the $71,500 resistance level during summer 2025.
Bitcoin chart showing multiple failed attempts to break above the $71,500 resistance level during summer 2025.

The recent charts show that process unfolding in real time.

Short-term price action shows repeated pushes into the $71,500 region followed by quick reversals. Medium-term charts show the broader pattern: several attempts at the same ceiling with no sustained acceptance above it.

Acceptance matters more than a brief breakout. Bitcoin frequently wicks above levels before falling back. Structural shifts occur only when price holds above resistance long enough that traders stop treating it as a short.

That has not happened yet.

The most recent rally failing to reach the ceiling, the lower high, adds evidence that buying pressure may be fading.

For now, the range remains intact.

Price level Market role
$73,700–$73,800 Upper resistance band from recent rallies
$71,500 Key resistance repeatedly rejecting price
$68,000 First support shelf beneath the range
$66,900 Secondary liquidity cluster
Low $61,000s Major historical consolidation zone

The repeated failures mirror earlier observations in my previous analysis examining how multiple rejections at the same level can gradually shift market psychology.

Each attempt that stalls adds weight to the next.

Bitcoin price chart showing recent repeated rejection near $71,500 with key support levels below and resistance levels marked above.
Bitcoin price chart showing recent repeated rejection near $71,500 with key support levels below and resistance levels marked above.

ETF flows and macro conditions complicate the breakout attempt

The technical picture is developing alongside a shifting macro backdrop.

Global markets moved into risk-off mode on March 5 as oil prices climbed following escalating tensions in the Middle East. Brent crude has traded in the mid-$80 range as traders price potential disruptions to Gulf energy routes.

Higher oil prices often feed directly into inflation expectations. In this case, the market reaction has been unusual: instead of government bonds rallying as a safe haven, U.S. Treasury yields have moved higher.

The U.S. 10-year yield has traded around the low-4% range, recently near 4.22%, as investors price the possibility that persistent energy inflation could delay interest-rate cuts.

That environment tends to pressure risk assets.

Higher yields raise financing costs and tighten financial conditions across markets. When the macro narrative shifts toward “rates higher for longer,” speculative assets often struggle to maintain upward momentum.

Bitcoin has increasingly traded in line with broader risk sentiment during such periods. When equities weaken and yields climb, crypto markets often follow the same direction in the short term.

The pattern showed up again during the latest move, with equities slipping and volatility rising as oil prices climbed.

Currency markets are also part of the picture.

A stronger U.S. dollar tends to correlate with softer Bitcoin prices on the margin.

Meanwhile, ETF flows have become more mixed.

Spot Bitcoin ETFs recently recorded strong inflow days of $458 million on March 2, $225 million on March 3, and $461 million on March 4. Those inflows followed several weeks of outflows.

Such bursts of demand can support rallies, but they do not always translate into sustained buying pressure.

When price approaches a major resistance zone like $71,500, even strong inflow days may struggle to overpower existing supply.

Support shelves beneath the range form the next roadmap

Bitcoin’s broader structure still follows the liquidity grid that has guided price movement across much of the current cycle.

The concept is straightforward. Markets tend to move between clusters of liquidity where traders historically placed orders, built positions, or triggered liquidations.

One of my earlier frameworks mapped several of those shelves across Bitcoin’s recent trading history.

Those levels remain largely intact today.

Support zone Historical significance
$68,000 Immediate support inside the current range
$66,900 Intermediate liquidity cluster
Low $61,000s Major structural support from past consolidation
$55,700 Deeper historical support shelf
$49,800 Lowest major liquidity pool identified in the grid

If the $68,000 shelf breaks, price could begin moving toward those lower liquidity pockets.

Markets often move quickly between such zones once a level gives way. The earlier drop from six-figure prices showed similar behavior, with Bitcoin falling rapidly from one shelf to the next.

Derivatives positioning can amplify that process. Liquidations tend to accelerate declines when leveraged long positions unwind. That acceleration is not here yet. Over the past 24-hours around $340 million has been liquidated across the crypto market, according to Coinglass.

For now, Bitcoin sits between the ceiling and the first support shelf.

The next attempt at $71,500 will reveal whether buyers can still reclaim the range or whether the market continues drifting toward the liquidity below.

The level has already been rejected several times.

The next test will determine whether the ceiling finally breaks or whether the staircase down becomes the market’s next path.

This recent rally had the potential to invalidate my $49,000 thesis. So far, it has not.

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