#比特币2026年行情展望 Recently studied the market heatmap carefully and finally understood why many people always end up losing money during volatile markets.



The heatmap essentially shows the accumulation of funds in the market. Red dense areas reflect historical selling pressure, while green concentrated zones indicate past buying support. To truly understand the market, you need to analyze these two key price levels.

First, look above — Bitcoin around 107,000 has formed a clear fund accumulation resistance zone. This level is not random; historically, there have been significant fluctuations near this area. In other words, this is a key zone for distribution at high levels, with enough fund concentration to serve as a major resistance during rebounds. If the market rallies to this point, those chasing longs recklessly are likely to get trapped.

Looking down, the 68,000 range shows a completely different pattern — the green hot zone indicates strong historical support. What does fund accumulation at lower levels mean? It signifies a zone of market participants’ confidence. From a trading perspective, this price area often contains many rebound opportunities.

The zone between these two levels is quite interesting. According to the heatmap, the middle region has low fund activity, with balanced buying and selling forces, and limited volatility. In such a pattern, swing trading might not even earn enough in fees to justify the effort.

The current strategic logic is quite clear — be alert to distribution pressure at high levels, focus on support opportunities at low levels, and mainly observe in the middle zone. Remember these two anchor points at 107,000 and 68,000, and many decision-making issues will become straightforward. There’s no need to fuss over the market every day; following the fund movements shown on the heatmap is often more reliable than trading based on gut feelings.
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GasBanditvip
· 9h ago
The theory of the heatmap sounds good, but how many people can really buy the dip without getting trapped? To be honest, we've seen the 107,000 resistance level several times already. It feels like we're watching the same play over and over. Those chasing the rally should really wake up. If there was such strong support around 68,000, it would have rebounded already. Stop just analyzing past data.
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LeekCuttervip
· 9h ago
The 107,000 resistance level is indeed fierce. Last time it approached, it was pushed down. There's really no profit to be made in this middle price range.
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ForkTonguevip
· 9h ago
It's another heatmap analysis. I've heard this explanation too many times. Those who actually make money are the ones who don't rely on technical indicators. To put it nicely, it's "capital accumulation"; frankly, it's betting that history will repeat itself. The market is not a machine.
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ApeWithAPlanvip
· 9h ago
The heatmap set is indeed very useful, but 99% of people look at it for nothing, and still chase highs and get trapped. I've already marked the 107,000 threshold long ago, but every time someone refuses to believe it.
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LowCapGemHuntervip
· 9h ago
The heatmap analysis is pretty good, but the 107000 area is really a trap. I saw many people get stuck and lose money there last year. To be honest, the fake-out trading in the middle section is really exhausting and not worth the effort. I’ve even become lazy about watching the market. The 68000 support level still feels solid; the historical data is right there.
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DataPickledFishvip
· 9h ago
The theory of the heat map sounds reasonable, but in actual operation, it's still easy to get slapped in the face by sudden market movements. Honestly, 68000 is indeed a good low buy-in level, just not sure how long I have to wait. The resistance at 107000 is really tough; last time, it shot up to 106800 but was hammered back down. The most annoying part is the oscillation in the middle, moving in and out of positions frequently. I want to ask, is this heat map still reliable under extreme market conditions? It feels like it’s better to combine it with other indicators; relying solely on the heat map can easily lead to being fooled.
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OnchainHolmesvip
· 9h ago
Heat maps are indeed useful, but to be honest, most people look at them in vain; they still can't change the habit of chasing highs and selling lows. Wait, will 68,000 really become support? It feels like historical support isn't reliable either. I remember the 107,000 barrier didn't hold for long last time; in fact, it was broken even more severely. The sideways fluctuations in the middle really aren't worth much; the transaction fees lead to heavy losses. Actually, it's just two numbers to remember, and everything else depends on execution. That's the hardest part.
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