Bitcoin is grinding at a critical resistance level while two macro catalysts — a looming Iran nuclear deal and a new Federal Reserve regime under Chair Kevin Warsh — threaten to determine the next major move.
Bitcoin is grinding at a critical resistance level while two macro catalysts — a looming Iran nuclear deal and a new Federal Reserve regime under Chair Kevin Warsh — threaten to determine the next major move.

Bitcoin is grinding at a critical resistance level while two macro catalysts — a looming Iran nuclear deal and a new Federal Reserve regime under Chair Kevin Warsh — threaten to determine the next major move.
Bitcoin traded at $67,000 on June 16, stalled at a two-week resistance band as traders weighed an Iran nuclear deal and the Fed's rate stance under Chair Kevin Warsh.
"Buying Bitcoin below its 200-week moving average has historically delivered median returns north of 113 percent over the following year," said Pete Perfumo, head of research at Kraken, in a note. "At these levels, Bitcoin has tended to offer immense value."
The 200-week simple moving average sits at $62,358, according to Kraken. Bitcoin briefly dipped below that level twice in the past two weeks before recovering each time, closing below it on only about 10 percent of trading days since mid-2017. The median time to break even for buyers below that level has been just two days, with a median maximum drawdown of only 9 percent over the subsequent year, Perfumo said.
On the derivatives side, high-leverage positioning adds fragility. Andrew Tate opened a 40x leveraged long on 57.36 BTC ($3.76 million) with a liquidation price at $65,216, according to on-chain analytics firm Lookonchain. The position was subsequently liquidated, marking his 108th such event, with 90 percent being Bitcoin long positions.
The Iran deal signing, expected in the coming days, introduces a geopolitical wild card. A diplomatic breakthrough could reduce energy prices and ease inflation, potentially giving the Fed room to cut rates — a bullish scenario for risk assets including Bitcoin. A breakdown in talks could have the opposite effect. The Fed under Warsh held rates at 3.50 percent to 3.75 percent at his inaugural FOMC meeting, with Fitch Ratings noting the central bank's "bias has shifted from patience to preemption" on inflation.
$67K-$69K ceiling holds as support levels come into focus
Bitcoin's nearest support at $65,000 has been breached, with deeper demand zones clustered between $63,000 and $62,500, according to technical analysis. On the upside, $67,000 to $69,000 remains the ceiling, followed by a heavier band from $71,500 to $73,000. A daily close above $71,500 would make a structural uptrend defensible, with short-term targets extending toward $73,000.
The 4-hour chart shows Bitcoin still respecting an ascending trendline, though intraday momentum has been neutral over the past eight hours with no directional commitment. The most likely scenario sees price chopping between $63,500 and $67,000 while macro catalysts remain unresolved.
Institutional forecasters remain split. Some bullish targets are contingent entirely on the $71,500 to $73,000 zone giving way. Until it does, high-leverage directional bets are trading against the range.
Ethereum and Solana have led a broader market bounce, with ETH gaining 3.2 percent and SOL rising 4.1 percent over the past 24 hours as of 07:00 UTC, according to CoinGecko data. The rotation suggests capital is flowing into altcoins while Bitcoin consolidates, a pattern that historically precedes either a broad-based rally or a corrective phase.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.