Bitcoin Faces Downtrend Risk at $82K Resistance: CryptoQuant
Zach Anderson
May 14, 2026 06:30
CryptoQuant warns Bitcoin may reverse its rally after hitting $82,000 resistance, with unrealized profits at year-high levels signaling potential selling pressure.
Bitcoin’s rally could stall after hitting key resistance at $82,000, according to a report from crypto analytics firm CryptoQuant. The level, defined by Bitcoin’s 200-day moving average, has historically acted as a significant barrier during bear market cycles. As of May 14, Bitcoin is trading at $79,829, down 1.53% in the last 24 hours, with a market cap of $1.58 trillion.
CryptoQuant noted this resistance echoes patterns from March 2022, when Bitcoin last attempted to break above its 200-day moving average before resuming a downtrend. “The current setup raises the question of whether history repeats,” the report stated. Adding to the bearish signals, traders’ unrealized profit margins recently hit 17.7%—their highest level since June 2025—indicating potential profit-taking pressure.
Daily realized profits have already spiked, with traders cashing out 14,600 BTC (worth $1.2 billion) on May 4, according to CryptoQuant. Historically, such spikes in realized profits during bear market rallies have preceded local price tops. The report predicts Bitcoin’s next support lies near $70,000, aligning with the average cost basis for short-term traders—a level that has often acted as support in previous bear markets.
Bitcoin’s recent rally began in early April, when it rebounded from $66,000 amid easing Middle East tensions and renewed risk appetite. Since then, BTC made higher lows but struggled to gain momentum above the $82,000–$83,000 resistance zone. On May 8, analysts flagged a rejection at $83,000 as evidence of structural weakness, while subsequent commentary on May 13 highlighted consolidation near $80,500.
Macro factors are also weighing on Bitcoin. The U.S. Labor Department recently reported a 1.4% jump in producer prices for April—the highest increase in four years—fueling inflation concerns. Historically, rising inflation has bolstered Bitcoin as a hedge, but short-term uncertainty appears to be overriding this narrative for now.
Despite CryptoQuant’s bearish outlook, some analysts remain optimistic. Michaël van de Poppe, founder of MN Capital, suggested Bitcoin could hit $90,000 if the U.S. Senate advances the long-awaited CLARITY Act, a crypto regulatory framework. Meanwhile, Arthur Hayes, head of crypto fund Maelstrom, argued that geopolitical tensions and increasing money supply could drive Bitcoin toward its all-time high of $126,000.
For traders, the near-term focus remains on whether Bitcoin can hold the $78,000–$80,000 region. Failure to do so could see a retest of mid-$70,000 support, while a breakout above $82,000 might open the door to higher targets in the $86,000–$88,000 range.
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