From 03:15 to 03:30 (UTC) on May 28, 2026, BTC fell sharply by 0.64% within 15 minutes. The price dropped from 74,239.8 USDT to 73,464.7 USDT, with a volatility of 1.04%. This move occurred during a market consolidation period, and the magnitude of volatility matched the characteristics of a liquidity contraction phase.
The main driving force behind this move was a combination of weak technical signals and short-term liquidity exhaustion. The OBV indicator showed a “roller-coaster top” reversal pattern, trading below its moving average line, indicating insufficient upward momentum. The market wrestled around the $70,000 key technical level; after stop-loss sell orders were triggered, algorithmic sell orders followed through, amplifying the selling pressure.
In addition, multiple secondary factors formed a resonance. Funding conditions remained under pressure: Bitcoin ETFs saw consecutive outflows at the start of 2026, and institutional investors showed a clear wait-and-see stance. CoinShares data showed that year-start capital inflows fell by 35% year over year. The number of active addresses on-chain dropped sharply, weakening the ability of buy and sell orders to absorb demand/supply. Meanwhile, cooling rate-cut expectations left risk assets broadly under pressure; the U.S. Dollar Index stayed relatively strong, further weakening BTC’s upside drivers.
Volatility risk remains to be watched closely. Key focus should be on the performance around the $69,000 key support level; if it breaks, BTC could quickly move down toward the $60,000–65,000 range. Investors should strengthen risk management for short-term trades and closely monitor on-chain capital flows and macro policy developments.