A key price level is giving Bitcoin trouble — and on-chain data may explain why.
Realized Price Puts A Ceiling On The RallyBitcoin tested the $75,000 level three times on Coinbase in a single 24-hour stretch and was turned back each time.
The rally itself has been real. Bitcoin climbed roughly 12% in March, touching a six-week high of around $76,000 on March 17. But momentum has stalled right where analysts warned it might.
Large Deposits Flood Into Exchanges What makes the stall more significant is what’s happening behind the scenes. On March 16, hourly Bitcoin inflows to centralized exchanges surged to 6,100 BTC — the highest single-hour reading since February 20.
Data shows that large deposits made up over 60% of that total, the biggest share since mid-October 2025.
When traders move Bitcoin onto exchanges, it usually means one thing: they’re getting ready to sell. Moreno said that historically, spikes in large exchange deposits have been tied to rising selling pressure.
The timing — right as Bitcoin ran into resistance — is hard to ignore.
The question now is whether that selling pressure will be enough to push prices back down, or whether buyers will absorb it and push through the $75,000 wall.
Fed Decision Adds To Market UncertaintyBroader financial conditions are adding another layer of complexity. The Federal Reserve is set to announce its rate decision Wednesday, and based on CME futures, traders are pricing in a 98.9% chance that rates stay where they are — with just a 1.1% chance of a hike.
The Harder Wall Still Lies AheadEven if Bitcoin manages to clear $75,000 with enough conviction to hold, there is another obstacle waiting higher up.
The full Realized Price — which reflects the average break-even level for active traders — currently sits near $84,700. That figure acted as resistance in both October and January.
Clearing $75,000 would be a start. Getting to $84,700 would be a different challenge entirely.
Featured image from West Coast Trial Lawyers, chart from TradingView



















