Bitcoin Braces for Miner-Driven Dip—Why the Bull Run Isn’t Dead Yet
Miners are cashing out, but the king of crypto isn't surrendering its throne.
Short-term turbulence ahead
Whale-sized sell orders from mining pools are flooding exchanges—classic profit-taking behavior after Bitcoin's 2025 rally. Expect volatility as weak hands get shaken out.The big picture stays green
On-chain data shows institutions accumulating every dip. The halving supply crunch hasn't even fully hit yet—this is just another chapter in Bitcoin's 'two steps forward, one step back' playbook.Meanwhile in TradFi land...
Goldman Sachs will probably spin this as 'proof' crypto is unstable—right before launching their own Bitcoin ETF with 2% management fees. Stay greedy, friends.
In the short term, bitcoin might encounter resistance close to the $121,000–$123,000 mark. Support is located close to $111,000 and then $102,000 if the decline persists. Before a new leg up, a retest of these levels might help reset momentum.
The outlook is still favorable in the long run. The macro environment still supports Bitcoin as a store of value, there are no significant indications that institutional holders are pulling out, and miner activity hasn’t escalated to a panic level. Any decline could be a fresh entry point rather than a long-term reversal if the current sentiment continues.