Bitcoin is currently maintaining a range-bound trading pattern. Under the multiple pressures of the macro environment, market liquidity remains constrained, and the price direction is unclear. Analysts point out that the interplay of energy prices, monetary policy, and geopolitical risks has led to compressed liquidity, causing the market to enter a "wait-and-see" period. The current market is not lacking in structure, but rather in incremental funds. Recently, Bitcoin has stabilized after experiencing volatility, with selling pressure easing and ETF funds showing a slight net inflow. However, spot demand remains weak, and the supply-demand imbalance limits price breakthroughs. Technically, Bitcoin found support in the $67,000-$69,000 range, with a key resistance level around $72,000. Analysts say there is a "liquidity gap" above this range; a successful breakout could quickly push the price to the $82,000 area. However, until demand significantly strengthens, the market will likely maintain a range-bound pattern. On the macro level, high energy prices, global central banks maintaining high interest rates, and uncertainty in the Middle East are all exacerbating market concerns about the risk of stagflation. Kraken Research points out that slowing growth coupled with inflationary pressures has complicated the policy path and suppressed the performance of risk assets. Against this backdrop, the market has entered a "liquidity compression phase." Bitunix analysis suggests that a mismatch of multiple macroeconomic factors has compressed funds into a narrow range, with Bitcoin serving more as an indicator of risk appetite than a trend-following trading instrument. In terms of funding, the spot Bitcoin ETF recorded approximately $1.5 billion in net inflows in March, an improvement from the net outflows in February, but still lower than January levels, indicating cautious institutional fund inflows. The derivatives market is defensive, with funding rates remaining negative and downside protection demand high; meanwhile, spot trading volume has not seen a sustained increase, indicating limited market participation. Overall, Bitcoin has not yet formed a clear breakout or downward trend, and is currently closer to a "accumulation and consolidation" phase. Its future direction will still depend on macroeconomic data, policy signals, and changes in the geopolitical situation. (The Block)