The start of the week is not encouraging for $BTC Bitcoin, which has fallen from $88,000 to $86,000 📉, accumulating four weeks of losses and institutional capitulation 😰. A quick bounce to $100,000 seems unlikely for now ⏳. We could see a short-term rebound, but if it loses support at $80,000, the outlook would complicate much more ⚠️. On the other hand, expectations for macroeconomic relief have resurfaced 💹, with a 75% probability of a rate cut by the Fed in December following moderate comments 🏦. This week, key data from the U.S. (PPI, retail sales, GDP, PCE) will be decisive 📊; if they indicate cooling, they could reduce real yields and attract buyers to risk assets 🚀. However, the macro game has changed: now the "fiscal dominance" post-Covid means that growth and liquidity are primarily driven by public spending 🏛️ and not just by the Fed, favoring assets with store of value appeal 💰. Investors must adjust their strategy if they only expect monetary stimulus 💡.
Will BTC bounce back to $90,000 soon?
The situation is delicate, but it is still not defined... 🔥 #BTCRebound90kNe
