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Just noticed Bitcoin’s movement—it's actually quite interesting. BTC is making a V-shaped rebound in sync with Nasdaq—this isn’t a coincidence. Earlier during the US trading session, Bitcoin fell sharply at the start due to geopolitical pressure and energy volatility, but immediately strong buyers stepped in and pushed the price back up within the same session. Rebound patterns like this usually indicate aggressive buying when prices drop, not a serious trend reversal.
What’s interesting is that Bitcoin is now trading around $77.63K, and its rebound structure really does closely match the Nasdaq pattern. This is understandable—both assets are sensitive to liquidity conditions and the market’s risk appetite. When Nasdaq recovers with a V pattern, it’s usually a sign that capital is starting to flow back into high-risk assets. But compared with the S&P 500, Nasdaq is more heavily weighted toward tech and growth stocks, so it becomes a more accurate proxy for reading speculative sentiment in the crypto market.
There’s one thing to note—Bitcoin dominance is rising to above 59%. This shows that investors are currently more focused on established crypto assets rather than speculative altcoins. In macro conditions like these that are still uncertain, market participants tend to move defensively first before further risk expansion. So this rebound doesn’t necessarily mean a bullish run has begun—more like tactical stabilization.
What makes me a bit skeptical is that—even though the price has rebounded—the sentiment gauge remains stuck at Extreme Fear. There’s a divergence between price action and market psychology. This has happened before, and it usually takes time for sentiment to normalize. Volatility is likely to stay elevated until this fear reading improves.
Macro factors still remain the main drivers. Oil prices are rising due to geopolitics, inflation expectations are still a concern, and bond yields are fluctuating. For Bitcoin, this has double implications: the narrative of an inflation hedge could be supportive, but tighter short-term financial conditions could put pressure on risk assets.
To see whether this develops into a sustained uptrend or just a relief rally, I’ll be watching a few things. First, whether Nasdaq can sustain its upward momentum. Second, whether Bitcoin can break and hold above $70K solidly. Third, what Bitcoin’s dominance trajectory looks like—if it keeps rising, it means the market is still in a defensive mode.
Overall, the rebound we’re seeing is tactical, not strategic. Market confidence is still fragile. It takes more than a V-shaped recovery to convince the market that this is the beginning of something bigger. Traders need to stay cautious and watch macro catalysts—inflation data, employment numbers, manufacturing reports—these are all still wildcards for volatility.