Coinbase says Bitcoinβs near-term path may hinge on two price zones: roughly $82,000 on the upside and $60,000 on the downside. In a new X post outlining its BTC βpractical playbook,β the exchange argues that combining structural support/resistance bands with options gamma exposure sharpens the trading map for whether BTC is more likely to mean-revert, break out, or accelerate lower.
The core framework starts with Coinbaseβs previously shared heatmap of βreal supply and demand levels,β built by aggregating market structure pivot points and volume into price bands. In that setup, the densest support cluster sits near $60,000, while the first dense resistance band sits around $82,000. Coinbase describes those areas as zones where market interest has already been established and where βsignificant pools of resting liquidity typically gather.β
Why Bitcoin Gamma Changes The Read
This weekβs addition is gamma exposure (GEX), which Coinbase frames as a way to map how options dealersβ hedging flows may either absorb volatility or amplify it. The firm calls the options market a βhidden liquidity providerβ and says GEX helps investors decide whether conditions favor range trades or breakout trades.
Coinbase explains the mechanism in practical terms: when dealers are long gamma, their hedging tends to lean against price moves; when they are short gamma, hedging can reinforce the move. βIn positive gamma regions, the dominant hedging behavior often looks like a shock absorber because if BTC rises, dealers sell spot (or sell futures) to stay hedged. If BTC falls, they buy to rebalance. That βsell strength / buy weaknessβ pattern reduces realized volatility and increases the odds of consolidation and βpinningβ around nearby strike clusters.β
It then contrasts that with the negative-gamma regime. βIn negative gamma regions, the dominant hedging behavior can flip into a trend amplifier. Rising BTC prices force hedgers to buy more while falling prices force hedgers to sell more. That βbuy strength / sell weaknessβ loop can turn ordinary breaks into fast repricing and liquidation-style cascades.β
After layering GEX onto its pivot map, Coinbaseβs conclusion is straightforward but consequential. β$82k remains the first gate to unlock further upside, while $60k appears to be the shelf that must hold to prevent accelerated downside,β the post says. It ties that to a βpronounced negative gamma bandβ in the $60,000β$70,000 region and βmeaningful positive gamma pocketsβ around $85,000 and $90,000.
That combination shapes the regime expectations. Coinbase says downside into $60,000 can accelerate because negative gamma may amplify selling pressure, while upside toward $90,000 may be more prone to grinding and pinning as positive gamma hedging dampens momentum.
How Coinbase Frames The Setups
The playbookβs scenario analysis reflects that asymmetry. Around $82,000, Coinbase treats first-touch rejection as a credible risk in a dense supply zone, especially without a clear macro catalyst. If BTC fails there, it says mean reversion becomes the higher-probability expression and warns breakout chasers can get trapped.
By contrast, a clean break above $82,000 is not defined by a brief spike but by βacceptanceβ β reclaiming the level, holding it, and using it as support. Coinbase argues that would suggest supply has been absorbed and raise continuation odds into higher liquidity bands, while still acknowledging the positive gamma pocket above could increase chop risk.
The $60,000 zone is framed even more carefully. Coinbase says it prefers long exposure only after a reclaim signal if BTC flushes into that area, rather than trying to catch the initial move lower, because negative gamma can make the path βviolent and prone to overshooting.β If $60,000 fails and BTC cannot reclaim it, Coinbase says the break could mark another βregime changeβ where downside extends faster than discretionary dip buyers expect.
At press time, Bitcoin traded at $65,026.

4 weeks ago
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