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Bitcoin Price Prediction 2021

Bitcoin whale indicator detects multi-month accumulation trend as BTC eyes $67K-retest

The "Whales Supply Shock" metric has been pretty accurate in detecting Bitcoin market tops.

Bitcoin's (BTC) biggest investors have been lately upping their reserves in sync with the ongoing price recovery, one Glassnode metric suggests.

Dubbed as "Whale Supply Shock," the on-chain indicator represents the ratio between the amount of Bitcoin held by "whales" and "fishes." Whales represent addresses that hold between 10,000 BTC and 100,000 BTC, while fishes are those that hold anything between 0.001 BTC and 1,000 BTC.

A rising Whale Supply Shock reading indicates a higher degree of accumulation by whales versus fishes. Conversely, a declining Whale Supply Shock shows fishes are accumulating Bitcoin at a faster pace than whales.

BTC Whales Supply Shock versus price. Source: Glassnode

That said, the Whale Supply Shock tends to provide "a measurement of supply locked in Whales wallets which can have [effect] on supply dynamics and thus on price," stated Dor Shahar, an on-chain analyst at CryptoJungle, in a tweet on Nov. 1.

BT price correlation with whale activity

The Whale Supply Shock appeared to have been predicting the macro Bitcoin price tops. For instance, the BTC price topped at near $65,000 in April, two months after the supply held by whales reached a sessional peak.

The metric showed that whales began distributing their coins among fishes, correctly predicting an upcoming macro top and correction. As a result, the Whale Supply Shock dropped, as shown in the chart below. 

BTC Whales Supply Shock recovers in tandem with price. Source: Glassnode

It started recovering after bottoming out in mid-July, indicating that whales started re-accumulating Bitcoin at a faster pace than the fishes. That coincided with Bitcoin rebounding from around $30,000 on July 20 to eventually reach a new record high of $67,000 three months later.

The correlation was also visible around Feb 2020, noted Shahar, stating that whales began distributing their BTC "right before the ATH," adding:

"Same phenomenon happened at May of 2019, whales have accumulated up to a certain point where the supply held by them reached a peak. Once again, right before the macro top they began to distribute coins."
BTC Whales Supply Shock peaks ahead of its spot price top in May 2019 . Source: Glassnode

Shahar cited the said chart fractals and ruled out the ongoing recovery in the Whales Supply Shock ratio as a sign of "a multi-month accumulation uptrend." He also noted that the supply held by whales in October, when Bitcoin's price was around $62,000, is much smaller than it was in April, saying:

"[It] might indicate accumulation period or a generally depleting supply held by whales."

Bitcoin technically bullish

Shahar's bullish outlook for the Bitcoin market appeared as the cryptocurrency recovered from under $60,000 to eye a retest of its record high at around $67,000.

Related: ‘Uptober’ closes at record high in best month of 2021 — 5 things to watch in Bitcoin this week

In doing so, BTC price appeared to have been forming a classic bullish continuation pattern called the "Bull Flag." That said, the price looks poised to break out of its ongoing consolidation range and rise by as much as the previous uptrend's height, also known as "Flagpole."

BTC/USD daily price chart featuring potential Bull Flag setup. Source: TradingView

The Bull Flag's profit target comes to be above $70,000.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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Bitcoin bull market ‘2nd leg has started,’ says BTC price model creator

The popular prediction model has been remarkably accurate in the past when it comes to forecasting Bitcoin's bearish and bullish cycles against its rising scarcity.

Bitcoin (BTC) marking a new high of $67,000 last week has opened the possibility to hit $100,000 by the end of this year.

According to PlanB, the creator of the popular stock-to-flow (S2F) model, called Bitcoin's price retracement from the $60,000-level the "2nd leg" of what appeared like a long-term bull market.

In doing so, the pseudonymous analyst cited S2F that anticipates Bitcoin to continue its leg higher and reach $100,000-135,000 by the end of this year.

The price projection model insists that Bitcoin's value would keep on growing at least until $288,000 a token due to "halving," an event that takes place every four years reducing BTC's issuance rate by half against its 21 million supply cap. 

Bitcoin after 2012, 2016, and 2020 halving. Source: PlanB

Notably, Bitcoin underwent three halvings so far in 2012, 2016, and 2020.

Each event decreased the cryptocurrency's new supply rate by 50%, which was followed by notable increases in BTC price. For instance, the first two halvings prompted the BTC price to rise by over 10,000% and 2,960%, respectively.

The third halving caused the price to jump from $8,787 to as high as $66,999,  a 667.50% increase. So far, S2F has been largely accurate in predicting Bitcoin's price trajectory, as shown in the chart below, leaving bulls with higher hopes that Bitcoin's post-halving rally would have its price cross the $100,000-mark.

Bitcoin S2F as of Oct. 26. Source: PlanB

PlanB noted earlier this year that Bitcoin would reach $98,000 by November and $135,000 by December of this year, adding that the only thing that would stop the cryptocurrency from hitting a six-digit value is "a black swan event" that the market has not seen in the last decade.

An 80% crash later

Despite the high price projections, Bitcoin should still see big corrections in the future. PlanB thinks the next crash would wipe at least 80% value off Bitcoin's market cap, based on the same S2F model.

Related: COVID-19 vaccine will spark Bitcoin ‘crash’ — Rich Dad Poor Dad author

"Everybody hopes for the supercycle or the 'hyperbitcoinization' to start right now and that we do not have a big crash after next all-time highs," the analyst told Unchained, adding.

"As much as I would hope that we don’t see that crash, I think we will. I think we’ll be managed by greed right now and fear later on… and see another minus 80% after we top out at a couple of hundred thousand dollars.”
BTC/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

But not everyone thinks the next correction will be as dramatic as the previous ones. Dan Morehead, the CEO of Pantera Capital, said mid-October that the next Bitcoin price drop would be less than 80%, citing a consistent drop in selling sentiment after each halving cycle.

Last week, Bitcoin (BTC) established a new record high at around $67,000 following a 53% rally in October so far. But the new highs prompted profit-taking among traders, resulting in retests of the $60,000 support level.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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Bitcoin’s $100K price target returns as BTC price breaks out of bull pennant

The bullish analogy appears as Bitcoin reserves across all the crypto exchanges fall to their lowest in the previous 12 months, suggesting holding sentiment among traders.

Bitcoin (BTC) looks poised to pursue a run-up towards $100,000 as its price breaks out of a classic bullish structure.

Dubbed as Bull Pennant, the setup represents a price consolidation period with converging trendlines that form after a strong move higher. It ultimately prompts the price to break out in the direction of its previous trend to a level typically at length higher by as much as the size of the initial large move.

On Bitcoin weekly charts, the cryptocurrency appeared to have been trending inside a similar consolidation structure, with its price fluctuating inside a Triangle-like structure following a strong move higher (Flagpole).

BTC/USD weekly price chart featuring Bull Pennant setup. Source: TradingView.com

Last week, Bitcoin broke above the structure's upper trendline as it rose by 13.5% with rising trading volumes to boot. As a result, the cryptocurrency's breakout move indicated its potential to rise by as much as the size of its previous trend (nearly $50,000).

Measuring from the point of breakout (~$48,200), the Bull Pennant's upside target thereby comes out to be another $50,000 higher, i.e., almost $100,000.

Other predictions

The technical setup projected Bitcoin at $100,000 no longer after many analysts envisioned the cryptocurrency at the same, six-digital valuation.

A team of researchers at Standard Chartered, headed by its global head of emerging market currency research, Geoffrey Kendrick, predicted BTC to hit $100,000 by early next year. They cited Bitcoin's potential to become "the dominant peer-to-peer payment method for the global unbanked" behind their bullish prediction.

David Gokhshtein, the founder of Gokhshtein Media and PAC Global, also imagined Bitcoin above $100,000 before the end of 2021. The executive based his bullish outlook on the amount of available fiat liquidity in the market, which, according to him, has prompted leading Wall Street players to purchase Bitcoin.

"Not everybody's going to come out publicly and tell you that they're buying bitcoin, but they are," Gokhshtein told Business Insider.

"There's too much money in the market. Way too much money. Institutions did not come in here to play for five minutes."

His statements appeared after George Soros' investment firm revealed at a Bloomberg event that it owns Bitcoin, sending the cryptocurrency spiking. That soon followed up with JPMorgan & Chase's latest report that showed institutional investors' preference for Bitcoin over Gold as an inflation hedge.

In an earlier study published in May, the banking giant projected Bitcoin to reach $140,000 in the long term.

Holding sentiment on rise

On-chain indicators highlighted a rise in holding sentiment among Bitcoin traders.

Related: Tesla may have made more money holding Bitcoin than selling cars

In detail, the Bitcoin reserves held across all crypto exchanges recently dropped to their lowest levels in a year, as per data provided by blockchain analytics firm CryptoQuant. The decline illustrated traders' intention to hold their Bitcoin tokens close than trading them for other fiat/digital assets.

BTC reserves across all exchanges. Source: TradingView.com

Therefore, declining Bitcoin balances on exchanges typically follow up with rise in the BTC price.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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Bitcoin ‘sell the rally’ indicator flashes again as BTC price breaks below $45K

An on-chain indicator, notorious for spotting fake bullish breakouts during downside corrections, flashes again.

A Bitcoin (BTC) on-chain indicator that spotted dead cat bounces during the yesteryear bearish market corrections has flashed again in August 2021.

Dubbed as "Bitcoin: Short Term Holder NUPL," the indicator takes into account the unspent transaction output, or UTXO, of BTC transactions not more than 155 days old. In doing so, it attempts to determine whether or not an investor is profitable within 155 days of purchasing and holding Bitcoin.

Therefore, if the NUPL, which stands for Net Unrealized Profit/Loss, returns a reading below zero, it means investors are making a loss on their Bitcoin investments. Conversely, an NUPL above zero shows that investors are making a profit.

Glassnode reported Thursday that the Bitcoin NUPL for short-term investors recovered back above zero, signifying their profitable state for the first time since May 2021's crypto market crash. Meanwhile, the blockchain analytics platform also signaled fears of potential sell-off, citing fractals from 2014-15, 2018, and March 2020 bear cycles.

Bitcoin short-term holder NUPL chart. Source: Glassnode

In detail, short-term Bitcoin holders earlier used the recovery rallies during corrections to secure interim profits.

The price action from 2014-15 bearish session shows BTC/USD resuming its downside correction despite a 100% rebound. Similarly, in 2018, a 97.41% upside retracement did little in securing the market from the prevailing bearish bias.

Bitcoin price recoveries did not last during the 2014-15 and 2018 bearish cycles. Source: TradingView.com

The latest upside recovery in 2021 came after Bitcoin prices crashed from circa $65,000 to around $29,000. The cryptocurrency rallied to $46,787 on the Bitstamp exchange following a major rebound afterward—a 63.59% jump.

Bitcoin corrected lower again on Thursday, falling below its psychological support level of $45,000. At its intraday low, the cryptocurrency was changing hands for $44,100.

BTC/USD price performance in recent history. Source: TradingView.com

The dissenting bullish case

Glassnode noted that such "rapid recoveries" are common in two cases: either bear market relief rallies or disbelief phases of bull markets.

Therefore, in saying so, the blockchain analytics platform did not rule out the possibility of an extended bull run, such as the one seen during the upside booms of 2013, 2019, and 2020.

More evidence corroborating the bullish outlook came from Glassnode's report published earlier this week. The platform spotted a decline in short-term holders in line with a rise in long-term holders, insomuch that the Bitcoin supply held by long-term holders reached a new all-time high of 82.68% of all the coins in circulation.

Related: Large hodlers accumulate Bitcoin below $50K as BTC transactions over $1M soar

Meanwhile, the coin possessed by short-term holders dropped to 25% of the net Bitcoin supply in ciculation, suggesting a run-up in holding behavior.

Long and short term holder supply ratio. Source: Glassnode

Historically, when the short-term holder ratio drops to 20%, it leads to a supply squeeze scenario, i.e., when coins in circulation fall short of the current demand.

“This is extremely similar to the volume of coins held by [long term holders] in October 2020 before the primary bullish impulse started,” Glassnode analysts wrote, adding:

"Whilst the supply squeeze based on the [short-term holder] Supply Ratio is not yet at 20%, there are numerous indicators and trends in play that suggest it may hit it in mid-September (but that the conditions for a supply squeeze are already in play)."

Bitcoin was trading around $44,200 at the time of this writing.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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