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Bitcoin ‘whales’ and ‘fishes’ pause accumulation as markets weigh March 50bps hike odds

If Bitcoin benefited from quantitative easing, will it be hurt by quantitative tightening?

An uptick in Bitcoin (BTC) supply to whales' addresses witnessed across January appears to be stalling midway as the price continues its intraday correction toward $42,000, the latest data from CoinMetrics shows.

Whales, fishes take a break from Bitcoin

The sum of Bitcoin being held in addresses whose balance was at least 1,000 BTC came to be 8.10 million BTC as of Feb. 16, almost 0.12% higher month-to-date. In comparison, the balance was 7.91 million BTC at the beginning of this year, up 2.4% year-to-date.

Bitcoin supply in addresses with balance greater than 1,000 BTC. Source: CoinMetrics, Messari

Notably, the accumulation behavior among Bitcoin's richest wallets started slowing down after BTC closed above $40,000 in early February. Their supply fluctuated within the 8.09-8.10 million BTC range as Bitcoin did the same between $41,000 and $45,500, signaling that demand from whales has been subsiding inside the said trading area.

A similar outlook appeared in addresses that hold less than 1 BTC, also called "fishes," showcasing that they had halted the accumulation of Bitcoin in February as its price entered the $41,000-45,500 price range.

 Ecoinometrics' analyst Nick blamed the Federal Reserve's aggressive tightening plans for making Bitcoin whales and fishes "cautious," reiterating his statements from last week, wherein he warned that "if Bitcoin has greatly benefited from quantitative easing, it can also be hurt by quantitative tightening."

"This is why inflation not showing any sign of slowing down is a big deal."

No "dot plot" yet

On Wednesday, the Federal Open Market Committee released the minutes of its January meeting, revealing a group of thoroughly alarmed central bank governors looking more prepared to hike rates too much to contain inflation.

As for how fast and how far the rate hikes would go, the minutes did not leave any hints.

Vasja Zupan, president of Dubai-based Matrix exchange, told Cointelegraph that the Fed fund futures market now sees a 50% possibility of a 50bps rate hike in March, a drop from the previous 63%. But the minutes themselves do not discuss a 0.5% interest rate increase anywhere.

"Of course, the mixed macroeconomic outlook has left Bitcoin's most influential investors — the whales and long-term holders — in the dark," asserted Zupan, adding:

"The top cryptocurrency has been cluelessly tailing day-to-day trends in the U.S. stock market. However, I see it as weighted and not long-term significant, especially as the Fed bosses—hopefully—shed more light on their dot-plot after the March hike."

Strong hodling sentiment

Researcher Willy Woo provided a long-term bullish outlook for Bitcoin, noting that its recent price declines, including the 50% drawdown from $69,000, were due to selling in the futures market, not on-chain investors.

Bitcoin demand/supply among holders versus futures market. Source: Willy Woo

"In the old regime of a bearish phase (see May 2021), investors would simply sell their BTC into cash," Woo wrote in a note published Feb. 15, adding:

"In the new regime, assuming the investor wants to stay in cash rather than to rotate capital into another asset like equities, it's much more profitable to hold onto BTC while shorting the futures market."

Related: Bitcoin briefly dips below $43K as Fed says rate hike ‘soon appropriate’

As Glassnode further noted, in the May-July 2021 session, investors' de-risking in the Bitcoin futures market coincided with a sale of coins in the spot market, which was confirmed by a rise in net coin inflow to exchanges. But that is not the case in the ongoing price decline, as shown in the chart below.

Bitcoin exchange net position change. Source: Glassnode

"Across all exchanges we track, BTC is flowing out of reserves and into investor wallets at a rate of 42.9k BTC per month," Glassnode wrote, adding:

"This trend of net outflows has now been sustained for around 3-weeks, supporting the current price bounce from the recent $33.5k lows."

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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Here’s What Will Matter More Than Ever for Bitcoin in 2022, According to Fidelity Macro Strategist

Jurrien Timmer, a macro strategist at financial giant Fidelity, is revising his outlook for Bitcoin (BTC) after the leading cryptocurrency dipped below a key price level. In a thread to his 86,700 Twitter followers, Timmer says that he was surprised to see Bitcoin not hold the line at $40,000 after falling steadily from its November […]

The post Here’s What Will Matter More Than Ever for Bitcoin in 2022, According to Fidelity Macro Strategist appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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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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Whole Bitcoin Ecosystem Flashing Signs of Bullishness, According to On-Chain Analyst Willy Woo

Top on-chain analyst Willy Woo says the entire ecosystem of Bitcoin buyers is telling him that the BTC market remains largely bullish. In a new tweetstorm, Woo informs his 723,300 followers that he sees an immense distribution phase playing out in Bitcoin. “Bitcoin continues to distribute coins evenly. Publicly held and retail entities continue to […]

The post Whole Bitcoin Ecosystem Flashing Signs of Bullishness, According to On-Chain Analyst Willy Woo appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Bitcoin could be on the verge of a big breakout at $42K, hodler activity suggests

$42,000 is becoming an increasingly important battleground for Bitcoin bulls and bears.

On-chain analyst Willy Woo asserted that Bitcoin (BTC) would break above the $42,000-resistance level in its coming attempts.

The researcher based his bullish analogy on the so-called Rick Astley indicator, a heat-map that tracks investors—the Rick Astleys of this world—that buy Bitcoin to hold the asset for longer timeframes.

The indicator earlier predicted Bitcoin price spikes based on investors' buying activity below certain technical resistance levels.

Investors' buy-and-hold habits tracked using Bitcoin on-chain heat map. Source: Willy Woo

However, Woo noted that the "strong-handed long term investors are absorbing" the Bitcoin supply below $42,000, which raises the cryptocurrency's prospects of closing above the level.

90 day moving average of Bitcoin moving to Rick Astley about to cross bullish. Source: Willy Woo, Glassnode

"Strong HODLers have been taking this opportunity to scoop large amounts of coinage while we're under the resistance ceiling," tweeted Woo.

The statements came a day after Bitcoin reclaimed its psychological resistance level of $40,000 as support.

BTC sustained above the price floor on Friday despite looming profit-taking sentiment. It established an intraday high of $41,191 before correcting lower to $40,360, as of 12:05 UTC.

Bitcoin's upside prospects looked limited due to its tendency to reject bullish breakout attempts above the $40,000-$42,000 area. In detail, the BTC/USD exchange rate has made at least ten attempts to close above the said range after May 19's notorious crypto crash

Bitcoin stuck below $42,000-resistance level. Source: TradingView.com

But each time, strong selling pressure around the area prompts the BTC/USD rates lower towards the $30,000-$35,000 range.

Supply squeeze underway

Woo's upside predictions also carried the supply squeeze undertones—a situation wherein the number of available Bitcoin supply falls below its spot market demand, leading to higher bids.

Related: This bullish Bitcoin options strategy targets $50K without risk of liquidation

Woo applied his own "Liquid Supply Shock" indicator to conclude that markets ran out of Bitcoin.

Bitcoin supply shock with respect to its price. Source: Willy Woo

In detail, Liquid Supply Shock is the ratio of coins that traders cannot buy versus the coins that they can buy. Woo calculates the supply shock by dividing the coins held by strong-handed investors with the coins held by speculative investors.

"Coins are rapidly disappearing from the available market as strong holders continue to lock them away for long-term investment," said Woo, adding that the supply squeeze could send Bitcoin to $55,000.

"I’ve not seen a supply shock opportunity like this since Q4 2020 when BTC was priced at $10k only to be repriced at $60k in the months thereafter. Our supply shock is still in play with higher prices expected."

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 analyst says ‘supply shock’ underway as BTC withdrawal rate spikes to one-year high

The supply shock is being unnoticed similar to Q4 2020 before the price of Bitcoin skyrocketed, says Willy Woo.

As Bitcoin (BTC) continues sideways inside the $30,000-$40,000 range, new data is emerging about the potential for a bullish breakout.

Is Bitcoin silently readying for a breakout like in Q4 2020? 

Willy Woo, an on-chain analyst, anticipates a potential supply shock in the Bitcoin market as long-term holders continued raking BTC supply from short-term ones. Woo stated in his July 2 newsletter that the process might push more Bitcoin out of circulation.

The analyst referred to the ratio of Bitcoin held by strong hands versus weak hands — also known as Bitcoin Supply Ratio — noting that the former is actively absorbing selling pressure from whales that have been dumping their crypto holdings since February.

BTC's availability on exchanges is declining with respect to the supply (blue), leading to a supply shock (green). Source: Woobull

"It reminds me of the supply shock that went by unnoticed by the market in Q4 2020," wrote Woo. "Pundits were debating whether BTC was an inflation hedge in a post-COVID world when the data was pointing to long term investors stacking BTC at a fast pace."

The price subsequently went on a tear, very quickly de-coupling from its tight correlation with stocks.

New active users rising

Glassnode, another on-chain data analytics service, also boosted Bitcoin's booming adoption prospects. The portal revealed that the Bitcoin network has been onboarding an average of 32,000 new users every day, which is a new high of 2021.

Bitcoin network user growth metric reflects rising adoption rate. Source: Glassnode

The Bitcoin Network User Growth metric last topped in January 2018, hitting approximately 40K before correcting lower alongside the prices. It showed that new users stopped coming to the Bitcoin network as its price crashed from $20,000-top in January 2018 to as low as $3,200 in December 2020.

"This is not the structure we are experiencing right now," explained Woo. "New users are taking this opportunity to buy the dip; they’re coming in at the highest rate seen in 2021."

Again, another example of on-chain data showing divergence to the price action.

Bitcoin is currently stuck below $34,000 at publishing time, up 17.52% from its previous bottom level of $28,800 on June 22.

Meanwhile, Petr Kozyakov, co-founder and CEO of crypto-enabled payment network Mercuryo, believes that Ethereum may steal the limelight from Bitcoin in the near term as the London hardfork approaches.

"The proposed launch of the London Hard Fork upgrade and the ultimate migration to Ethereum 2.0 is helping to renew investors’ confidence," he added. "Once the hype settles, Bitcoin could move up to $50,000 in the short-to-medium term perspective."

Bitcoin withdrawal transactions hit one-year high

Data analytics firm CryptoQuant reported earlier Tuesday that Bitcoin's net outflow transaction count from spot exchanges crossed the 60,000-mark for the first time in a year. Meanwhile, the total number of Bitcoin deposits to spot exchanges' wallets decreased to below 20,000.

Bitcoin spot exchange inflow and outflow transaction count. Source: CryptoQuant 

The BTC withdrawal rate jumped in the period that also saw regulators increasing their scrutiny over cryptocurrency trading platforms. For instance, the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) banned Binance—the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange by volumes—from operating regulated activity in the country "without the prior written consent."

On Monday, Barclays notified its clients that they could no longer transfer funds to Binance, citing the FCA's order. However, the London-based bank said clients could withdraw funds from Binance to their banking accounts.

Earlier on Tuesday, the People's Bank of China also took action against a local company for allegedly trading cryptocurrencies on the sideways of their regular business activities. Beijing had effectively prohibited all kinds of cryptocurrency-related activities in May, effectively forcing the world's largest crypto mining community in its regions to either shut down or move their operations abroad.

Generally, a run-up in Bitcoin withdrawal rates is seen as traders' intention to hold the cryptocurrency instead of trading it for other assets, including rival cryptos and fiat money. Therefore, with overall BTC withdrawals hitting a one-year high, expectations remain higher than Bitcoin is preparing for another upside run on the so-called "hodling" sentiment.

But the total Bitcoin reserves held by exchanges have remained relatively stable since May, indicating that the latest spike in withdrawals has had little impact on the overall exchange balance as of July 7.

BTC balance on exchanges. Source: Bybt.com

It's worth noting that exchanges' BTC balances can differ greatly based on their geographical dominance.

For instance, trading platforms having association with China and Chinese traders reported declines in their Bitcoin balances. They include Binance, whose BTC reserves dropped by 7,214.97 units in the last week, and Huobi, which processed withdrawals of 4,398.63 BTC in the same timeframe. OKEx BTC balances dropped by a mere 1,357.53 BTC.

However, US-based Kraken added 6,751.98 BTC to its vaults, the highest among the non-Chinese exchanges, in the previous seven days while Coinbase reserves increased by 168.88 BTC.

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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