Bitcoin finished Sunday’s weekly close hovering near two-week highs, as traders positioned for potential volatility ahead of the new week. The market’s focus remains tightly centered on a long-term technical level: the 200-week simple moving average (SMA), a benchmark that often influences whether bull trends can sustain or fade.
At the same time, some analysts are pointing to shifting macro conditions and renewed demand around US spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) as possible support for risk assets, arguing that the sector may be developing “greener shoots” after recent stress.
According to TradingView, BTC/USD was consolidating near $62,700—where a key long-term trend line aligns with the 200-week SMA. The technical picture matters because, unlike shorter-term averages, the 200-week level is widely watched as a “regime” indicator: when price respects it, bulls often argue the market is maintaining a longer-cycle structure; when price loses it, sentiment can deteriorate quickly.
On Saturday, BTC pushed to about $63,450, helped by thinner exchange order books during a three-day US holiday weekend, according to commentary cited in the source. One market commentator, Exitpump, suggested that stronger passive supply was “pressing price from above,” implying upward momentum may face resistance near recent highs.
Attention then shifted to positioning effects. Trader Daan Crypto Trades pointed to short position liquidations as price rose, using CoinGlass data to describe total crypto liquidations of roughly $167 million over the last 24 hours. The implication is that BTC’s advance was at least partly driven by forced buying from traders closing shorts—an effect that can temporarily lift price but may reverse if the market fails to build new spot demand at higher levels.
That setup led to a key question emphasized by the same commentator: whether the $62.6K zone around the weekly 200MA will hold as support, or whether the move was primarily liquidity-clearing before another pullback.
Beyond the technical level, some traders are also watching recurring calendar behavior. Killa reiterated a warning to followers, claiming that each of the past seven Mondays has been “absolutely terrible” for Bitcoin price action.
They questioned whether the same pattern might repeat, underscoring that—while such observations aren’t guarantees—behavioral tendencies and liquidity schedules can matter for how quickly breakouts succeed or fail.
While market structure is being tested on-chain and on charts, QCP Capital pointed to a different potential driver: renewed ETF demand. In a report published Friday, the firm argued that tailwinds may be forming for crypto and broader risk assets.
A central element of that thesis is renewed net inflows to US spot Bitcoin ETFs. The source notes that Cointelegraph reported on last week’s US nonfarm payrolls coming in below expectations, which contributed to a softer market view on hawkish interest-rate paths by the Federal Reserve.
The QCP analysis also referenced a “dovish” shift that showed up across asset markets. It described a 2% move in gold as one sign, while clarifying that this may reflect real-rate and safe-haven dynamics more than broad growth conviction. Still, the direction of rates expectations is one of the clearer macro levers for high-beta assets like crypto.
QCP further cited CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, which—at the time of the analysis—showed a near-80% chance of the Fed holding rates at its July 29 meeting. The firm also suggested that additional confirmation would likely be needed before markets could fully price a more durable “front-end dovish repricing,” pointing specifically to upcoming CPI inflation data.
The immediate test for Bitcoin is whether price can defend the 200-week SMA area around $62,700 after a week that included both upward momentum and liquidation-driven moves. With traders flagging historical Monday weakness and analysts emphasizing ETF inflows as a potential stabilizer, the next sessions may reveal whether demand is strengthening beyond short squeezes—or whether the market reverts as quickly as it advanced.
Watch how BTC behaves around the weekly trend level in early-week trading, and whether ETF flows stay positive in tandem with any shifts in Fed rate expectations following upcoming inflation data.
This article was originally published as Bitcoin Nears $63.5K Weekly Close as Trader Flags ‘Terrible’ Monday Risk on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


