NGUYENNGHIA’S OUTLOOK: BTC WILL SURPASS 80,000 USDT AFTER A MINOR CORRECTION
According to Thien Kien Thi Gia theory, price does not primarily move because of news, but because of accumulated bias within collective market psychology. As long as positive bias has not reached its extreme, corrections function as rebalancing phases rather than structural reversals.
At the present stage, BTC is undergoing a short-term bias-release phase. After a prior upward move, expectations of rapid continuation were pushed too quickly among late participants. The market therefore requires a temporary pullback to cool sentiment, reduce premature consensus, and establish a more stable equilibrium. This correction is not driven by a breakdown of macro structure, but by the necessity of neutralizing overheated short-term bias.
In Thien Kien Thi Gia analysis, the key variable is not whether candles are red or green, but the state of expectation. If a pullback does not coincide with extreme negative bias, widespread panic, or structural failure, then it does not represent a reversal. It represents a shakeout.
Current bias structure suggests:
– Medium-term positive bias remains intact
– Short-term negative bias has not reached an extreme
– Capital has not exited the system, but is rebalancing
When short-term bias is sufficiently neutralized, the market tends to resume the unfinished positive trajectory. The 80,000 USDT level is therefore not an emotional projection, but a logical continuation of an incomplete positive bias cycle.
Thien Kien Thi Gia operates through three phases: accumulation of expectation, consensus expansion, and de-consensus (bias release). BTC is currently in a short-term de-consensus phase within a broader positive bias structure. Once that release process stabilizes, the upward trajectory is likely to resume in order to complete the cycle.
Thus, the current correction should not be interpreted as weakness, but as a structural requirement for rebuilding sustainable momentum.
The market will confirm this through price behavior. The responsibility of a Thien Kien Thi Gia analyst is to identify the phase correctly, without being distracted by surface-level volatility.
— nguyennghia
