Bitcoin (BTC) fell to bearish target zones on Feb. 10 as bulls failed to hold important support above $22,000.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD dropping to $21,633 on Bitstamp.
The pair reacted badly to regulatory fears from the United States, but had already faced days of bearish sentiment, with traders expecting a retest of $21,000 or even lower.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin traded at around $21,800, down around 7% in February so far.
“Bear market back or are we just having a slight correction?” Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, queried on the day.
Some were busy with short positions as BTC price action conformed to expectations, with popular trader Crypto Tony eyeing $21,400 as a potential bounce zone should losses continue to materialize.
“Profit coming in nice on the short and my next target is the support cluster at $21,400. If we see a retest of $22,300 then this could be your chance to get in, upon a failed retest,” he wrote in part of commentary alongside an explanatory chart.
Those remaining in long positions thus felt intense pain overnight. According to data from data resource Coinglass, long liquidations for Bitcoin alone totaled $64.6 million for Feb. 9.
As noted by On-Chain College, a contributor at analytics platform CryptoQuant, these included $24.3 million in a single hourly candle — the most since the FTX crash in early November.
Including altcoins, Feb. 9 liquidated $254 million in longs.
Looking beyond immediate price performance, meanwhile, fellow CryptoQuant contributor Venturefounder focused on whether the macro bottom was really in for Bitcoin.
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