
The post Bitcoin Dips Below $89,000 as Bull Correction Deepens— What’s Next for BTC Price? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The Bitcoin price has slipped below $89,000 as global markets remain locked in a risk-off mood. Stocks are bleeding, crypto is following, and capital is rotating into traditional safety—pushing precious metals like gold & silver higher as investors hedge uncertainty. The selloff is being driven by a messy macro mix: renewed trade war fears and tariff chatter, elevated geopolitical tension, and tighter liquidity conditions as yields and the dollar stay sensitive to every headline.
In this environment, BTC price is behaving less like a hedge and more like a high-beta risk asset. The key question now is whether this dip is a routine bull-market correction that attracts fresh demand or the start of a deeper unwind that drags price toward lower support zones before a meaningful rebound.
BTC Chart Watch: Volume Profile Flags a Heavy Supply Wall Above $91K
The 12-hour chart shared by a popular analyst, Altcoin Sherpa, shows Bitcoin breaking lower after failing to hold the mid-range, and the volume profile on the right makes the next decision zone very clear. There’s a thick band of traded volume (a high-volume node) stacked around the $91,000–$92,000 region, which typically acts like strong resistance on the way back up because many positions were built there. As long as BTC trades below this cluster, rebounds can be sold quickly.

On the downside, price is drifting toward a thinner liquidity pocket, where moves often become faster because there is less historical volume to “catch” the price. That puts focus on the $88,000–$87,000 area first, and then the broader support zone around $85,000–$84,000 if sellers stay in control. For bulls, the immediate job is simple but tough: reclaim $91K, then push through $92K to flip the volume shelf back into support; otherwise, the path of least resistance remains lower.
What’s Next for the BTC Price Rally?
Bitcoin’s break below the $89,000 region keeps the near-term bias tilted to the downside, and the volume profile adds weight to that view. With a thick supply shelf sitting around $91,000–$92,000, any bounce that fails to reclaim this band is likely to be sold into. If BTC price cannot stabilize above the $88,000–$87,000 area, a move toward $86,000 becomes a credible next target, with a deeper slide potentially extending to $85,000–$84,000.
However, if buyers manage a sharp recovery and flip $91K–$92K back into support, the correction can remain contained. Besides, the market could shift back into a consolidation phase rather than a prolonged drawdown.

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