Bitcoin climbed toward nearly $65,000 following the release of U.S. inflation data, but the rally was met with selling as two groups of Bitcoin investors used the price strength to take profit rather than add exposure.
How U.S. Inflation Data Pushed Bitcoin Close to $65,000
The move higher followed the latest U.S. Consumer Price Index release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the economic reference point that framed trading on the day. For related coverage, see Bitcoin BIP 110 Nears Deadline as Miner Support Stays at Zero.
Bitcoin reacted as a macro-sensitive asset, with the inflation print shaping expectations for risk appetite and liquidity. The advance toward the $65,000 area tracked the data release rather than any crypto-specific catalyst. For related coverage, see Lyn Alden's Orange Juice Raises $40M for Bitcoin Treasury Company.
Softer or easing inflation tends to support Bitcoin sentiment because it raises the odds of looser financial conditions, which historically lifts appetite for risk assets. That same dynamic recently drove prices when Bitcoin approached the same $65,000 level on a separate macro headline. For related coverage, see Bitcoin Policy Institute Joins Lawsuit Over Inactive Bitcoin Wallet Control.
Which Two Investor Groups Sold Into the Rally
The core of the story is that two cohorts of holders sold on the rise rather than after any breakdown, using the inflation-driven spike as an exit. The behavior was framed as selling into strength, a pattern more consistent with profit-taking than panic.
On-chain conditions behind the move were detailed in Glassnode's weekly market pulse, which tracks how different investor segments position as price rises. Distinguishing which cohorts drive distribution helps signal whether short-term traders or larger holders are leading the selling.
Selling during an advance, rather than into weakness, suggests the two groups were rebalancing or realizing gains at higher prices. That is a different signal than forced selling, and it speaks to conviction as Bitcoin tested a psychologically important level. Debates over holding through such moments echo longer-term risk assessments that weigh short-term volatility against extended time horizons.
What the Selling Pressure Means for Bitcoin’s Near-Term Outlook
A rally accompanied by selective selling can still be constructive if demand absorbs the supply hitting the market. The presence of distribution does not by itself invalidate the move, as coverage of Bitcoin's push back above the $65,000 mark noted.
The round number itself matters. A level like $65,000 naturally attracts resistance and profit-taking, so the mix of macro support and investor selling produces a balanced rather than one-directional setup.
For the near term, the read-through is whether follow-through momentum holds the level, whether support is retained on any pullback, and whether the two selling cohorts continue to distribute. Those are the signals worth watching as the inflation-driven move settles.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.