Bitcoin dominance has been locked inside the same range for months. It keeps bouncing between 58% and 60%, rotating from one end to the other without breaking out either way.
The range is still intact. According to cryptocandy24x on X, dominance is now pushing toward the range low again at 58%. The bias holds as long as price stays above that level.
Rotation Signal or Just Another Bounce
“BTC.D range movement has continued for months now. It is still in the range between 58-60% and keeps rotating from the range high to low/low to high. If the momentum continues, then we may see it at a range high of 60% or higher in the coming days,” cryptocandy24x said on X.
That 60% level has capped every rally since the range formed. A reclaim there would apply pressure on altcoins, which tend to lose ground when BTC dominance climbs. Whether this rotation holds or breaks is the question nobody has answered cleanly yet.
BTC price meanwhile tested 68.4K. Not a clean level, but notable given what sits above it.
The CME Gap Nobody Is Ignoring
CME closed at 70.1K. That gap is now sitting below the close, and traders who follow gap fills know how often those get revisited. KillaXBT on X noted the setup directly.
“CME closed at 70.1K, creating a gap below the close. As always, these gaps tend to have a high probability of being filled. If we push up to fill the gap and see a rejection followed by downside continuation, there’s a strong probability we retest the 66K level next week,” KillaXBT posted on X.
That 66K retest scenario depends on what happens at the gap. A clean fill with rejection changes the picture fast. KillaXBT also confirmed remaining short, with overall structure still bearish below 71.4K.
The 71.4K level has acted as the line in the sand. Price has not reclaimed it. Until it does, the bias from that corner stays the same.
Dominance holding above 58% keeps the altcoin picture uncertain. A drop below would favor alts. A move back toward 60% or above flips that entirely. Both scenarios are live right now, which is exactly why the range matters.












