Bitcoin is making noise again. The world’s largest cryptocurrency now trades at $102,872.27, showing a 5.76% daily gain and a 6.69% weekly climb. Despite the price rise, trading volume in the last 24 hours dropped by 11.05%, sitting at $69.07 billion. This mismatch between price and volume hints at cautious optimism in the market.
The critical level remains at $108,000, a price point BTC has touched twice but failed to pass. This resistance won’t fall without serious buying strength. If bulls manage a clean breakout, eyes turn toward a new all-time high (ATH) between $128K and $130K. Until then, the market may stay locked in its current range, testing patience and strategy.
Bitcoin’s struggles to break tthrough $108K
Bitcoin’s rally can be traced back to the April 2024 halving, when block rewards dropped to 3.125 BTC. This event historically sparks supply shocks, and this cycle is no different. By July 2024, BTC began a steady climb from $60,000, rising above $90K by year-end and entering a tight range between $90K and $108K.
The $96K zone saw the most trading activity in recent months, marking it as a liquidity stronghold. Volume spikes during earlier $108K breakout attempts show market eagerness, but not quite the muscle to push through. Until buyers dominate that level, price action may keep swinging sideways, gathering momentum for the next move.
Market watchers now wait for signs of bullish exhaustion or confirmation of accumulation. If BTC does leap past $108K with strong volume, the next target is the ATH zone. But if the breakout fails again, a correction toward $90K support is on the table.
Real time business metrics with Phong Le’s vision
At the “Bitcoin for Corporations 2025” event, Phong Le, CEO of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), revealed a bold new standard. In his keynote, he outlined a Bitcoin-powered reporting model that updates business performance metrics every 15 seconds. “That’s 500,000x more transparency than quarterly reports,” Le said, drawing applause from a packed audience of CFOs and tech leaders.
The strategy has already transitioned to the real-time KPI format, demonstrating the pragmatic adoption of crypto integration. Next, Executive Chairman Michael Saylor came to the stage, promoting the application of Bitcoin for long-term value preservation. It was stressed that corporate treasury networks have to synchronize with the swiftness, openness, and durability of Bitcoin.
Industry players such as Simon Gerovich, Eric Semler, and Alex Leishman shared the same view that institutional adoption of so-called Bitcoin-centric strategies is just around the corner. This may ignite wider discussions on corporate governance and reporting standards. The message for now is simple: Bitcoin is no longer an asset, it is turning into infrastructure.