Summary Bitcoin has recently slid to $76K. From the early-May local high near $82K, that is roughly a 7.5% drawdown in two weeks. Mid-May saw $1B+ in weekly outflows and a $649M single-day exit, confirming institutional de-risking is accelerating. Most ETF positions are now underwater. The 200-day moving average sits at approximately $82K-$82.5K. Last week, price rallied to $82.4K and was immediately rejected, confirming the 200 DMA as active resistance. Where We Stand Bitcoin ( BTC-USD ) has recently slid to $76K. From the early-May local high near $82K, that is roughly a 7.5% drawdown in two weeks. Five consecutive daily candles have closed red. BTC appears to be slowly bleeding. The Fear and Greed Index reads 40 on May 20, sitting right at the boundary between neutral and fear. Sentiment has not collapsed into extreme fear, but the trend is clearly deteriorating. The clearest signal this week came from ETF flows: On May 18, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $649 million in net outflows, the third-largest single-day exit of 2026. For the week of May 11-15, cumulative outflows exceeded $1 billion, the heaviest weekly withdrawal since February. Ethereum ETFs extended their losing streak to six consecutive sessions. Where is the money going? Most likely back to equities. The S&P 500 broke above 7,500 for the first time on May 14, and the Dow topped 50K, driven by strong megacap tech earnings (84% of S&P 500 companies beat Q1 estimates). At the same time, hotter-than-expected inflation data in mid-May (CPI 3.8%, PPI 6%) pushed back rate-cut expectations, triggering broad risk-off flows. On the derivatives side, Bitcoin open interest stands at approximately $56.5 billion. The May 13-14 sell-off triggered a massive spike in long liquidations, followed by continued flushing through May 18-19. Leverage is being cleared, but elevated open interest suggests more deleveraging may follow. BTC perpetual funding rates have been negative since early March, the longest stretch since 2023, meaning shorts have been the dominant force for months, paying fees to maintain bearish positions. The repeated long liquidations are further weakening buy-side conviction. Combined with the ETF outflows above, both on-chain and off-chain capital are bleeding simultaneously. It is worth noting that much of the negative funding reflects institutional hedging (hedge fund redemptions, MSTR arbitrage, miner AI-pivot hedges), not purely directional bearishness. But the more crowded the short side becomes, the more violent the eventual unwind. What Is Driving This The decline is the convergence of several forces reinforcing each other. ETF outflows are the dominant force. Mid-May saw $1B+ in weekly outflows and a $649M single-day exit, confirming institutional de-risking is accelerating. Most ETF positions are now underwater . Geopolitical risk remains the largest wildcard. Trump's May 18 flip-flop on Iran strikes keeps binary risk elevated, pressuring all risk assets simultaneously. Miner stress and the AI pivot are adding structural sell pressure. Mining difficulty is down 10.7% YTD after six negative adjustments. Public miners sold a record 32,000 BTC in Q1, more than all of 2025. The S21 production cost band at $69K-$74K forms a physical floor where further declines trigger difficulty drops and reduce sell pressure. Cycle positioning gives bears their strongest argument. The halving-to-top pattern held again: April 2024 halving, October 2025 top near $126K, roughly 18 months. But the max drawdown of 52% is shallow versus the historical 77-87%. Cycle purists argue the bottom is not in. On-chain accumulation is the clearest bull signal. Whale wallets (1,000+ BTC) added 270,000 BTC in 30 days through late April, the largest monthly intake since 2013. Exchange reserves hit a 7-year low at 2.2M BTC. Large holders are absorbing what leveraged traders are selling. Key Levels to Watch Instead of assigning probabilities to scenarios, the more useful framework is to identify the technical levels that will tell us which way this resolves. Looking Up: The $82K-$85K Gauntlet The 200-day moving average sits at approximately $82K-$82.5K. Last week, price rallied to $82.4K and was immediately rejected, confirming the 200 DMA as active resistance. Adding to the resistance, an unfilled CME futures gap from early February spans roughly $80K-$85K. Last week's rally to $82K partially filled the gap, but closing it entirely requires sustained buying through a zone where the 200 DMA and heavy overhead supply converge. BTC needs to reclaim and hold above $84K to confirm a trend reversal. Below that, every rally is a sell-the-bounce setup. Source: Blockchain Daily Looking Down: Two Walls Before the Abyss If the current level fails, the first structural support is the weekly Bollinger Band lower rail, currently in the $71K area. A tag of this level would represent roughly a 7% decline from current prices and align with the S21 miner shutdown zone ($69K-$74K), where difficulty adjustments would kick in to reduce sell pressure. Below that, the 200-week moving average (200 WMA), currently estimated around $63K-$65K, serves as a strong structural support. If price revisits this zone, it would form a classic H1 2026 double bottom with the February low of $59.9K. If $71K breaks, the next meaningful support is the 200 WMA at $63K-$65K. A hold there would confirm the double bottom and likely set the stage for the next major rally. A break below it opens a very different downside scenario. Disclaimer: The information provided herein does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, trading advice, or any other sort of advice, and should not be treated as such. All content set out above is for informational purposes only. Original Post Editor's Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.