Bitcoin Price Eyes $134,100 Peak, but Pullback Risks Remain
The Bitcoin price is on the move again, climbing 3.2% in the past 24 hours and leading a wider 3.7% gain across the crypto market. Over the past month, it’s been up about 5%, showing that momentum is gradually improving.
But the rise isn’t without signs of hesitation. Beneath the surface, two underrated yet critical metrics are shifting in ways that could slow the next leg higher, even as the bigger picture still looks bullish.
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Whales Pull Back as Exchange Outflows Ease
One key factor to watch is whale behavior. Whales are large holders — typically wallets with 1,000 BTC or more — and their activity often signals market direction.
Data shows the number of whale entities has dropped to a three-month low of 1,350, down steadily since October 14. The first dip from the October 14 local high was around the time the Bitcoin price corrected from $115,000 to $106,400; a 7.40% dip.
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This shows that some large holders have been taking profits. As a result, much of the current buying appears driven by smaller, retail participants rather than institutional-scale players.
A related metric, exchange net position change, complements this view. It measures how much Bitcoin moves in or out of exchanges each day. Negative values mean outflows (buying), and positive ones mean inflows (selling).
On October 15, outflows reached 111,720 BTC, signaling strong buying pressure. By October 26, they had dropped to 54,643 BTC, a decline of about 51%.
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Outflows still suggest accumulation, but the slowdown hints that the intensity of buying is fading, and short-term selling could return before the next leg higher.
Bullish Divergence Holds, but Bitcoin Price Tests Resistance
At the same time, the Relative Strength Index (RSI), a tool that measures buying versus selling strength, continues to support the broader bullish view. The indicator has been forming higher lows since mid-October, even as the price briefly dipped, creating what’s called a bullish divergence.
This usually means sellers are losing control and buyers are gradually returning.
The RSI trend ties neatly into the current chart pattern. Bitcoin has now confirmed its falling wedge breakout, with prices holding above $111,000 and moving close to $114,900.
A full daily candle close above $117,600 (critical resistance) could unlock the next resistance levels at $121,400 and $126,300, with a potential target near $134,100, a new all-time high zone. That would be a 20% upmove from the breakout level of $111,000.
However, if Bitcoin fails to hold above $112,200, a deeper pullback could follow. A drop below $108,900 (a 6% drop from the current level) would expose $103,500. This is a level that previously served as strong support.



