Bitcoin (BTC) continues to trade in a narrow band despite steady corporate accumulation and advancing institutional integration, as macro policy uncertainty replaces leverage-driven liquidations as the dominant force shaping the crypto market.
The asset briefly slipped below $65,000 in Asian trading before stabilizing near $65,300, reflecting what analysts describe as a supply-sensitive environment rather than a structural breakdown.
Elevated flows from large holders to exchanges have increased short-term supply visibility at a time when spot demand remains measured, keeping prices contained within well-defined support and resistance levels.
“When policy becomes harder to price, crypto typically absorbs the volatility first,” said Iliya Kalchev, analyst at Nexo Dispatch, noting that digital assets are now reacting to the same macro signals that are driving equities, gold and bond markets.
Macro Uncertainty Replaces Liquidation Risk
The current consolidation phase follows a full reset in derivatives leverage that had previously amplified both rallies and sell-offs.
According to a Bitfinex report, volatility compression and neutral funding rates indicate that forced liquidations are no longer the primary driver of price action.
Instead, markets are waiting for clarity on inflation, tariffs and interest-rate policy.
“Markets can digest volatility; they struggle with uncertainty that cannot be framed,” Kalchev said, pointing to the reintroduction of a temporary global tariff regime and its implications for growth and inflation expectations.
Also Read: Blockchain Data Now Predicts Drug Crises Months Before Official Statistics, Chainalysis Finds
Sticky U.S. inflation data has already pushed rate-cut expectations further out, while upcoming labor, sentiment and producer price releases are expected to determine whether yields and the dollar strengthen, a combination that has historically capped crypto upside.
Structural Demand Builds Beneath the Surface
Despite the muted price action, long-duration accumulation continues to reshape market structure.
Strategy added another 592 Bitcoin for roughly $39.8 million, bringing its holdings to 717,722 BTC, more than 3.4% of total supply.
At the same time, institutional plumbing continues to expand.
Regulated venues are moving toward round-the-clock trading, capital treatment for stablecoins is improving, and traditional allocators are increasing exposure to spot exchange-traded products.
The Bitfinex report described the current phase as one of balance rather than distribution, with a dense demand cluster between $60,000 and $69,000 acting as a structural support zone while capital expansion remains limited.
Liquidity, Not Narrative, Will Decide the Next Move
Ethereum and higher-beta tokens have underperformed during the consolidation, reflecting what analysts say is a positioning-driven environment where liquidity conditions matter more than sector-specific narratives.
“Liquidity discipline, rather than narrative momentum, is likely to determine the next directional move,” Kalchev said.
Stablecoins are emerging as a critical bridge between crypto and traditional markets, with projections for market capitalization to approach $2 trillion by 2028 implying up to $1 trillion in incremental demand for short-dated U.S. Treasuries.
That dynamic is increasingly tying digital asset performance to the front end of the rates curve.
Read Next: Personal AI Could Replace Delegates In Crypto Governance, Says Ethereum Co-Founder



