Bitcoin is quietly walking its way down the liquidity staircase, and the next solid step sits around $85,000.
That number is not coming from a Fibonacci retracement, a moving average crossover, or any other technical analysis ‘gold standard.’
It comes from my simple grid of horizontal bands, grounded in factors that actually move markets: order-book depth, leverage positioning, psychological interest points, and historical price movements over an 18-month window.
Basically, these are the prices at which traders place their stop-loss and take-profit markers.
On a 30-minute chart, those bands form thick channels, and over the past year, Bitcoin has treated them like rungs on a ladder, pausing, stalling, and reversing at the same prices again and again.
Over the last month, that ladder has been pointing down.
From complacent highs to a vacuum below
The top white band is where Bitcoin found its all-time high of $126,000. It traded within this zone from May to October, with two slight dips below during September. Once it broke below during the tariff crash on October 11, it finally gave way completely at the start of this month.
At the start of the slide, Bitcoin wicked down to a critical price point at $106,400, which I’ve talked about at length. Historically, when price wicks down on the 30-minute chart like this, it’s an ominous sign that it will eventually find its way to that level. And this time was no different.
Price action started to cluster at the top of the tight yellow band, roughly between $112,000 and $106,400. Every attempt to break higher into the next set of white lines struggled. The channel acted like a ceiling that kept absorbing buy pressure.


When that ceiling finally gave way, it did not do so gently.
The moment bids thinned out at that band, Bitcoin did what it often does in these grids: it sought out the next area of resting liquidity. The drop through the low $100,000s into the mid-$90,000s looked violent on lower timeframes, yet on the map of channels it resembled a jump from one floor to the next.


Price then spent time grinding across the $97,000–$100,000 zone. This area had already been highlighted months earlier as a thick structure of orange lines. The psychological $100,000 support level gave up without a fight.
$100,000 to $93,000 was the place where spot buyers had shown interest before and where derivative traders had repeatedly built and unwound positions. Once again, the market treated it as a staging ground, not as a destination.
As soon as that zone exhausted, the staircase pulled Bitcoin lower.
The current battlefield: the purple band
Fast forward to the latest charts. Bitcoin now oscillates in the low $90,000s and high $80,000s, inside a wide purple channel.
You can see how the previous supports have flipped into resistance. Levels around $92,000–$93,000, which caught price on the way down the first time, now cap intraday bounces.
Each revisit attracts selling, evidence that trapped longs are using any strength to exit and that fresh shorts are leaning against a level they trust.


Underneath, the purple lines map a series of shelves: $89,000, $87,000, then the last major one at roughly $85,000. These shelves are not arbitrary.
They are prices at which liquidity has clustered consistently since the launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs in the US. Market makers recycled inventory there, whales layered bids there, and funding and open interest shifted there. In other words, this is where the market has history.
Bitcoin is already sitting close to the mid-section of that band. Volatility has compressed compared with the waterfall move that sliced through the $97,000–$100,000 zone.
That change in character often precedes a second leg, as participants wait for the market to choose a direction before committing new risk. If selling pressure returns, there is not much in the way between current prices and the bottom of the purple channel.
Why $85,000 matters
The $85,000 region stands out for three reasons.
First, it represents the deepest pool of liquidity inside the current purple band. The density of levels around $85,000–$86,000 suggests that a lot of historical positioning converges there. Markets are attracted to such magnets, especially after a series of failed attempts to reclaim higher ground.
Second, the path between $89,000 and $85,000 is relatively clean on the grid. There are fewer intermediate bands, which means that once the current shelf gives way, price has room to accelerate until it meets the next cluster of orders.
Recent history supports that idea: the break under $110,000 did not grind lower in a slow trend, it air-dropped to the next meaningful zone.
Third, reaching that level would complete a measured move that mirrors the previous leg down from the $109,000–$103,000 area. The market often works in symmetrical swings when it hunts out fresh liquidity pockets. Traders who watch these structures may see $85,000 as a logical completion point for the present sequence.
None of this guarantees a visit. What it offers is a roadmap. If Bitcoin continues to respect the same grid it has been respecting for over 18 months, $85,000 becomes the next stop in a story that has already written several chapters in advance.
What lies below the purple floor
If Bitcoin does tag the bottom of the purple channel, the story does not end there. The grid extends further, into a landscape of green lines that start around $84,000 and stretch toward the high $70,000s.


Should that band fail, attention shifts to the pink cluster between $77,000 and $74,000. Then the violet channel would be next, where the line spacing tightens again in that region, a visual hint that the market spent a lot of time transacting there in the past.
This is a significant price point in my opinion. It is where Bitcoin posted a new all-time high just before the last halving, and just a little higher than the 2021 high. $73,000 acted as a ceiling going into 2025 and could very well be our support lifeline in 2026-2027.
Long-term holders who view Bitcoin’s current correction as a buying opportunity may have resting bids in that pocket. Short-term traders who sold the breakdown from $100,000 may also choose to secure profits there.
For those with a weak constitution, I recommend looking away now.
The final line on my map goes as low as $49,800. That level marks the lowest significant shelf in the current structure. If the market ever reaches it, sentiment will likely feel washed out.
Yet from a channel perspective, it would still be a touch of an old liquidity pool, not a journey into uncharted territory.


The bear market, if we are now in it, could bottom around this price. $49,800 is a level that’s been rigorously defended at times across the last two cycles.
Falling under that would likely trigger extreme panic among Bitcoiners and new ETF buys alike. It would feel like the sky is falling to any bulls who bought in after 2020 or who don’t use a dollar-cost-averaging strategy.
Personally, I like $73,400 as the bear market floor for this cycle. It feels bearish enough to be realistic. There’s history, liquidity, and support in that region.
A roadmap, not a prophecy
The key to using these channels is discipline. They do not tell us that Bitcoin must fall to $85,000, or that it cannot first bounce back to $97,000 or $100,000. They offer a way to view the market as a series of probable reaction zones rather than a random walk.
Right now, the story on the 30-minute chart is simple.
Bitcoin has stepped down from one liquidity shelf to the next for weeks. It now wobbles inside a purple corridor where past positioning has been heavy. The bottom of that corridor sits near $85,000, and the layers beneath it, in the low $80,000s and mid $70,000s, are already marked out.
If the selling continues, these are the places where the market is most likely to slow down, consolidate, and potentially reverse. For traders who know how to position around those moments, the map is already drawn.
None of this is intended to be individual financial advice. These are my price points to watch for Bitcoin’s next move. It just so happens that Bitcoin has tagged them consistently since early 2024. What will happen next, not even Satoshi knows.
