Bitcoin Slips While Market Weighs Bulls Before Jackson Hole

The shift is a decline of about 7 percent from its high, and although the decline has raised concerns that the momentum is waning, the overall trend remains positive. The pace has been slowed by profit-taking and macroeconomic uncertainty, but the underlying demand and confidence among long-term holders have not been lost.
Bitcoin in Practice Outside of Speculation
The evolution has also brought into focus how Bitcoin is utilized outside of price speculation. Investors are also finding more ways to utilize their BTC in the real world, whether for cross-border payments or entertainment platforms. An example is crypto casinos, which are increasingly gaining prominence because they emphasize the ability of digital assets to transfer across borders in real-time without the need to use traditional banks.
The popularity of fast-paying crypto casinos illustrates how Bitcoin functions as more than an asset held in cold storage, giving it utility even when prices face short-term pressure. The same applications can be seen in merchant adoption and freelance payments, where companies can receive or send payments nearly instantly through the same infrastructure.
Reset Leverage After Fast Gains
The direct reason behind the dip is a wave of liquidations that hit the market. More than $1 billion of leveraged positions were wiped out in recent days, and almost all the losses were incurred by traders who were betting on further price gains. These liquidations were mostly long positions, approximately 95 percent of them, indicating the extent to which aggressive leverage had accumulated following the steep rise in Bitcoin earlier in August.
Ethereum, which had been spearheading the rally, experienced liquidations of $170 million, with Bitcoin having more than $100 million. These compulsory sales caused a domino effect, driving prices lower than they would have been had organic selling been the only method.
Market observers refer to the event as a temporary reset as opposed to a structural weakness. Nick Forster of Derive.xyz observed that the liquidations are a positioning, not a fundamental, phenomenon. That difference is important since it implies that the decline is more a matter of traders rebalancing their risk than a failure of underlying demand. Every round of leverage cleanup has historically left the market in a better position, positioning it to make a more sustainable ascent.
Profit-Taking Pressure
Profit-taking has been a factor as well. Following a rally to new all-time highs, most holders were comfortably in profit, and the urge to take profits was hard to resist. The Market Value to Realized Value ratio of Bitcoin is approximately 21%, which is within the range that analysts refer to as a mild danger zone.
When the majority of holders are in profit, there is natural selling pressure as investors prefer to bank returns instead of risking short-term volatility. Glassnode statistics point out that Bitcoin has already experienced three major profit-taking waves during this bull run. The impact has been a temporary stalling of momentum, not a reversal of the longer trend, and the present phase is in line with that.
Fed Policy Uncertainty
Another uncertainty has been created by the policy stance of the Federal Reserve. A large part of the recent rally in Bitcoin was underpinned by the anticipation of sharp rate cuts, but that has since been tempered by strong labour market data and mixed inflation prints. Polymarket data indicates that the probability of no Fed cut in September has increased dramatically in recent days, to 26 percent, indicating how rapidly sentiment can change.
Although the majority of predictions continue to indicate a reduction, the optimism that supported previous risk-taking has dissipated. Investors now turn to the speech of Jerome Powell at Jackson Hole to get hints, but analysts do not think that he will make any commitments before the September meeting.
Technical Signals are Constructive
Although the short-term outlook is cautious, technical analysis still provides grounds to be optimistic. The 50-day exponential moving average that has been supporting the market over the past few months has not been breached yet. Although the prices may fall further, there is good support at around $112,000, supported by Fibonacci retracement levels.
The 200-day moving average supports the wide base of the $100,000 zone below it. These technical frameworks indicate that as long as Bitcoin does not drop significantly below six figures, the overall uptrend is still in place. This presents a buyback opportunity to many investors instead of a reason to leave the market.
Comparison of Market Breadth
This is supported by market breadth data. Most of the top 100 cryptocurrencies are still trading above their 200-day averages, indicating long-term strength. The short-term weakness is more apparent, with half of the same assets falling below their 50-day averages, but that picture is very similar to what is happening in equities like the Nasdaq. The correlation shows that the pullback in Bitcoin is a broader recalibration in risk assets and not a crypto-specific issue.
Long-Term Projections Remain Bullish
The bull case is also supported by longer-term forecasts. Forecasts by major organizations and experts are still in the $130,000 to $150,000 range by the end of 2025, with some more ambitious estimates going much higher. Proponents such as Michael Saylor and Cathie Wood still cite the use of Bitcoin as a store of value, with price targets of $400,000 to $500,000 in the next few years. Notably, a lot of these predictions were made prior to the recent high of over $124,000, which means that analysts still believe there is a lot of upside potential even after the recent rally.
What to Watch Next
In the end, the short-term decline of Bitcoin is being influenced by three factors: the indecisive position of the Fed, the deleveraging process, and the inherent desire to take profits after new records. All these factors have a historical precedent and are usually followed by consolidation instead of collapse.
The future is positive for those who hold and those who use BTC in real-life applications. The headlines may change with price movements, but the overall trend of adoption, institutional interest, and real-life use cases such as cross-border payments and digital entertainment are only further solidifying the asset.