Bitcoin extended its corrective move on February 5, falling to $69,900 as selling pressure accelerated across the market.
The drop marks the lowest price level since late 2024, confirming a sustained breakdown from the recent consolidation range.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin was trading near $69,843, down 20% for the week, with downside momentum remaining intact.
The chart shows a clear sequence of lower highs and lower lows over the past several sessions. After failing to hold above the mid-$70,000 region, Bitcoin entered a steeper sell-off phase, with each rebound attempt capped at progressively lower levels.
From the local highs near $90,000, Bitcoin has now declined by approximately 22%, highlighting the severity of the ongoing correction. The most recent leg lower shows limited buying response, suggesting sellers remain in control.
Volume behavior on the chart reinforces the bearish structure. Red volume bars expanded notably during the latest sell-off, particularly as price pushed below the $72,000–$71,000 zone.
This pattern indicates active distribution rather than low-liquidity drift, with market participants using rallies to exit positions. The absence of strong green volume during rebounds further confirms weak demand at current levels.
The loss of the $70,000 handle is technically significant. The level had previously acted as a stabilizing area during earlier pullbacks, but the chart shows price breaking cleanly below it with follow-through.
Once that support failed, downside momentum accelerated rapidly, pushing Bitcoin into the high-$69,000s without meaningful consolidation. This suggests that prior demand in this zone has been largely exhausted.
As long as Bitcoin remains below former support levels now acting as resistance, the broader structure continues to favor downside risk. The chart shows no clear base formation yet, with price still trending lower into the latest candles.
For stabilization to occur, the market would need to slow the rate of decline and form higher lows, conditions that are not yet visible in the current price action.
The post Bitcoin Falls to $69,900, Slipping to Fresh Multi-Month Lows appeared first on ETHNews.


