Bitcoin trades at $93,365, up 1.71% in 24 hours, down 1.02% in the last 7 days, and higher by 4.67% over the last 30 days. Price action feels calm on the surface. Underneath, the macro backdrop looks anything but calm. Bitcoin consolidates near cycle highs as confidence in U.S. monetary governance faces rare stress. Is this just another range? Or the base before something bigger?
Source: CoinCodex
BTC now sits in a zone where conviction matters more than momentum.
On January 9, the U.S. Department of Justice served the Federal Reserve with grand jury subpoenas tied to a $2.5 billion renovation probe. The focus sits on whether Chair Jerome Powell misled lawmakers during June 2025 testimony. Powell responded with an unusual public address, calling the investigation unprecedented and politically motivated.
President Donald Trump denied involvement, yet his past pressure on the Fed remains fresh. Rates still sit at 3.50%–3.75% despite easing in 2025. Lawmakers from both parties warned about damage to institutional credibility, as markets listen closely when central bank independence comes into question.
Bitcoin exists for moments like this. Trust fractures, and alternatives gain attention.
Gold ripped to record highs above $4,630. Silver surged toward $86. The U.S. Dollar Index slipped 0.4%. Bitcoin did not explode higher, yet it refused to break down. BTC held the $90,000–$92,000 range and briefly reclaimed $92,000 before consolidating.
That matters. In past cycles, BTC behaved like a risk asset. This time, it looks steadier. Is Bitcoin slowly reclaiming its hedge narrative?
BlackRock moved 3,143 BTC, worth about $285 million, to Coinbase Prime in late 2024. The transfer likely supports operations for its iShares Bitcoin Trust. This signals infrastructure use, not speculation. On-chain transparency confirms real flows.
ETF data reinforces the trend. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $116.7 million in net inflows. Long-term holder selling also slowed, per Glassnode data, as supply pressure continues to fade.
One more signal stands out. Strategy bought 13,627 BTC for $1.25 billion near $91,519. Total holdings reached 687,410 BTC. Michael Saylor does not chase breakouts. He buys bases. That alone shapes sentiment.
Technicals remain simple and unforgiving.
$90,000 acts as critical weekly support
$79,000 marks the average U.S. ETF entry price
$93,500 remains stubborn resistance
BTC retested $93,500 with shallower rejections. Bulls want a weekly close above that level. Bears watch $90,000 closely. Lose it, and patience thins.
Source: X
| Year | Min Price | Avg Price | Max Price |
| 2026 | $85,000 | $102,000 | $125,000 |
| 2027 | $110,000 | $135,000 | $165,000 |
| 2028 | $140,000 | $175,000 | $215,000 |
| 2029 | $170,000 | $210,000 | $260,000 |
| 2030 | $200,000 | $250,000 | $320,000 |
| 2040 | $650,000 | $850,000 | $1,200,000 |
These projections reflect growing institutional adoption, constrained supply, and recurring macro trust shocks. Volatility never disappears. The long-term bias remains upward.
Bitcoin does not need chaos to work, yet chaos accelerates adoption. The Trump–Fed clash adds fuel to an existing fire. ETF inflows stay positive, corporate treasuries keep buying, and long-term holders reduce selling.
BTC may range near $93K today, and history shows that long consolidations at highs often resolve higher. The real question is not whether Bitcoin survives these cycles. It is how many investors stay patient long enough to benefit.


