Following a brief rally on Tuesday, BTC once again dropped below the $40,000 level during today’s session. Wednesday’s selloff has seen prices fall by as much as 4%, whilst ETH also declined by the same amount. Bitcoin The world’s largest cryptocurrency moved lower on Wednesday, following a brief rally during yesterday’s trading session. Following a […]
- Home
- BTC analysis
BTC analysis
Large hodlers accumulate Bitcoin below $50K as BTC transactions over $1M soar
The dominance of Bitcoin transactions of values above $1 million has doubled year-over-year, hinting at a rising institutional involvement in the cryptocurrency space.
Institutions have not left the Bitcoin (BTC) market even in the face of a 50%-plus bearish correction earlier this year, shows data provided by Glassnode.
The blockchain analytics platform reported on Monday that the dominance of Bitcoin transactions exceeding $1 million has surged twofold since September 2020 — from 30% to 70% of the total value transferred.
Since retail investors do not typically engage in large-volume transactions, Glassnode guesses that the institutional investors might have been behind the spike in the $1 million–$10 million transaction group.
Moreover, the platform noted that the Bitcoin network processed the said bulky transactions as the BTC/USD exchange rate traded lower from $65,000 to below $30,000 in the second quarter of 2021.
“As the market traded down to the lows of $29k in late July, the $1M to $10M transaction group spiked markedly, increasing dominance by 20%,” wrote Glassnode in a report from Monday.
“This suggests that these large-size transactions are more likely to be accumulators than sellers and is again, fairly constructive for price.”
Small transactions lose dominance
Glassnode provided additional volume data that showed a structural decline in small-size transaction dominance.
In detail, transactions of less than $1 million fell by half — from 70% in September 2020 to 30%–40% dominance in March–May 2021. The declines suggest that small investors capitulated their Bitcoin holdings to secure early profits.
During the mid-May crypto market crash, the dominance fell to nearly 20% but recovered back to the 30%–40% range as Bitcoin’s price consolidated above the $30,000 support level. It remained within the said percentage range during the recent run-up to levels above $46,000.
“[The data] clearly demonstrates a new era of institutional and high net worth capital is flowing through the Bitcoin network since 2020,” Glassnode asserted.
Hodl sentiment returns
More evidence of Bitcoin accumulation came from Glassnode metrics that tracked the hodling behavior of investors.
The “Long and Short Term Holder Supply Ratios” indicator reported that the Bitcoin supply owned by long-term holders (LTH) reached an all-time high of 82.68%. Meanwhile, the short-term holders (STH) supply continued to decline, hitting 20% and suggesting holding and coin maturation in play.
Glassnode suggested that when the STH supply ratio reaches 20%, it follows with a major supply squeeze — i.e., a supply shortage that typically drives the underlying asset’s prices higher.
Related: No, Bitcoin isn’t entering a 2018-like bear cycle, new data suggests, as BTC targets $45K
But who will accumulate the remaining 5% of the adjusted supply? A Glassnode metric suggests coins aged between one week and three months represent a large portion of the liquid supply.
“We can see that after the uptrend in Q1 (old coin distribution), these age brackets have fallen back to bear market equilibrium level of around 12.5% to 15% of supply,” wrote Glassnode, citing the chart above.
“This downtrend indicates that coin maturation is indeed in play, and that many of the 2021 bull market buyers have stuck around to become strong hand HODLers.”
Bitcoin was trading at $45,930 at the time of writing, down 0.73% from its intraday high.
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.
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.
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.
"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,
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.
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.
Bitcoin miners’ revenue rebounds to $60M per day — Is the bull run about to resume?
Miners are returning to Bitcoin as difficulty drops and revenues reach all-time highs.
Bitcoin (BTC) miners collected $60 million on a thirty-day average timeframe as of May 5, showing the first signs of recovery after last month's severe revenue drop that followed mass miner outages in China's energy-rich provinces.
In April, coal mining accidents and subsequent inspections in Xinjiang lacerated energy supply to the regional cryptocurrency mining industry. That forced miners to turn off their Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) hardware, which exclusively generates computing power to secure and put the "work" into Bitcoin's proof-of-work.
According to data from Blockchain.com, Bitcoin Mining revenue fell from its 30-day average peak of $60 million — recorded on April 16 — to as low as $57.08 million on May 2. The given resource collects miners' data from block rewards and transaction fees paid to miners.
The drop in profits coincided with a decline in the Bitcoin network's hash rates, signifying that many ASIC hardware went offline after losing their chief energy source. The total hash rate per second (7-day average) plunged from a record high of 172 EH/s on April 16 to 131 EH/s on April 23, a drop of roughly 30%.
It has since recovered to 168 EH/s on May 5, indicating that miners are resuming their bitcoin operations, following a considerable mining difficulty drop four days ago.
Effects on Bitcoin spot rate
Bitcoin prices suffered significant declines following China's outages.
The benchmark cryptocurrency was already correcting lower after establishing a historical peak near $65,000 on April 14. The China FUD apprehensively accelerated the sell-off, causing the BTC/USD exchange rate to plunge to as low as $50,591 as of April 25.
Bitcoin's price and hash rate drop occurred almost simultaneously, feeding another evidence about a higher positive correlation between the two metrics.
Simply put, the hash rate represents the computational power of the Bitcoin network. This means that the higher the hash rate, the higher the cost of theoretically "attacking" Bitcoin, making this metric synonymous with the network's security.
The Bitcoin rate has recovered to a little over $55,000 as of Wednesday, much in line with the hash rate, signifying that the network reset is helping to maintain the cryptocurrency's prevailing bullish bias.
More upside tailwinds come from Bitcoin mining difficulty projections. For example, data from BTC.com shows it should rise by a modest 1% in the subsequent bi-monthly (or 2,016-block periods) adjustment on Thursday next week.
The network difficulty, which shows how difficult it is for nodes on the Bitcoin network to solve the equations necessary for mining operations, had dropped 12.6% on May 2. That tends to increase margins for both inefficient and efficient miners, promising lower risks of Bitcoin sell-off at the producers' end.
Meanwhile, with an upside adjustment looking more likely and mining activity rising on the Bitcoin network, the long-term bias for the cryptocurrency remains bullish.
An earlier report from Cointelegraph compared the correlation between Bitcoin prices, hash rate, and mining difficulty, ruling out that the first has a lagging correlation with the latter two despite the popular mantra, "price follows hash rate."
The BTC/USD exchange rate had closed 2020 at $28,990 after Bitcoin's network difficulty plunged to 17.438 TH/s from 19.679 TH/s in the November-December session. The period also saw a significant drop in the hash rate but left Bitcoin's overall upside bias untouched.
Bitcoin bulls respond with a $150M short squeeze above $53K — Can BTC go higher?
Bitcoin saw $150 million worth of short contracts obliterated within hours.
Roughly $150 million worth of shorts were liquidated within a span of hours as the price of Bitcoin (BTC) rose from around $47,000 to over $53,000 on April 26.
The cryptocurrency market as a whole saw a strong short squeeze, as Ether (ETH), Binance Coin (BNB), and other major cryptocurrencies also rose by around 15% in the same period.
Following Bitcoin's 12% recovery within a single day, the futures market has completely reset, with funding rates hovering at neutral levels.
Why today's Bitcoin short squeeze is bullish
A short squeeze in trading refers to when short-sell orders in the futures market are liquidated in a short period.
When shorts are liquidated, short-sellers are forced to buy back their positions, ironically causing the buyer demand in the market to increase.
Hence, the number of shorts rapidly declines, and long contracts or buy orders begin to dominate the market.
When the number of longs increases substantially, the funding rate of Bitcoin spikes. This happens because the funding rate increases when there are more long orders in the market.
If the funding rate is above 0%, buyers have to pay short-sellers a portion of their position every eight hours to sellers, and vice versa.
In the case of Bitcoin in the last 24 hours, despite BTC's strong rally, the funding rate has remained relatively low.
In fact, according to Bybt.com, the funding rate across major exchanges for Bitcoin is below 0.01%, which is below the neutral rate
It means that there are still more shorts than longs in the Bitcoin futures market, which could catalyze more upside.
This trend is bullish for Bitcoin because it comes after a mass liquidation of short contracts. Lex Moskovski, the CIO at Moskovski Capital, said:
"~$150M of #Bitcoin shorts liquidated on this brief move up. Nothing smells better than roasted bears in the morning."
Traders believe Bitcoin could aim higher in short-term
In the near term, traders say that the $55,500 price level is an important one to reclaim for a chance at new all-time highs.
Johnny, a cryptocurrency derivatives trader, said:
"Swept the lows and now we have a very strong bounce. We are not out of the woods yet. Reclaim $55,500 and than we can talk about new ATH. For now, play it level by level. Strong reaction so far."
Adnan van Dal, a former institutional trader, emphasized that if Bitcoin does not drop until the U.S. market opens, then the likelihood of a bigger rally increases.
Dal wrote:
"If $BTC can make it to US open (EUR am Man shrugging) think cud be ok for a bit. Durable goods orders at open, actual data's been good, SPX near ATH post useful Friday profit taking & started firm. Think helps - coincident SPX / $BTC weakness a thing this year. TSLA wildcard later tho."
As long as Bitcoin remains above $51,000 heading into the U.S. market open, and aims for a recovery above $55,000, the chance for an all-time high in the foreseeable future would remain strong.
Bitcoin whale watching: This metric that called the 2017 top is now flashing red
While demand for Bitcoin remains high, current profit-taking behavior suggests that the market may be on the verge of turning bearish.
After weeks of Bitcoin (BTC) sell-offs, high-net worth Bitcoin holders, or whales, are finally back to buying.
Their buying activity not only picked up when BTC's price broke out of the two-months ascending triangle to new all-time highs, but it has also stayed intact since the price crash on April 18.
Whales have come back to accumulate Bitcoin
Whales' continuous buying activity comes at a time when the number of addresses holding more than 1,000 Bitcoin has reached its four-month support line.
This is probably not a coincidence, as the turnaround takes place at a time when profit-taking in the market is close to its support line too.
Current profit-taking behavior has followed a seven-month trend
The level at which profit-taking takes place can be derived from the adjusted spent output profit ratio (aSOPR), which measures the ratio between the price sold and the price paid for a coin while disregarding temporary coin movements (movements within less than one hour).
In other words, aSOPR measures how much profit holders were sitting on (in U.S. dollars) at the time they sold their coins.
Since September 2020, profit-taking has continuously found positive support at higher levels. This suggests that whenever sell-offs have happened in the past seven months, sellers have been comfortable not selling at a higher profit level each time, compared with the previous sell-offs. However, this trend might eventually come to an end.
Profit-taking activity suggests the market is at a pivotal moment
When zooming out and looking at profit-taking behavior in all prior bull markets, it becomes apparent that this is not only a one-time or a short-term trend but rather a longer-term pattern in Bitcoin bull markets.
These support lines tend to hold for three to 18 months. The chart below shows that a break of the second support line in each bull market hahistorically confirmed that the bull market top was in.
Not only is the aSOPR close to breaking the seven-month support, but there is also one major difference in the latest pattern of this metric that could be a cause of concern.
Usually, the short-term tops of the aSOPR come in at higher levels each time, as the price increases further and rising confidence leads people to hold on to higher profits after each sell-off.
However, in the latest pattern, profits have been realized earlier in every sell-off wave for the last three months (see the red arrow), a pattern usually common after a bull market top was already in.
Short-term sellers are in the driver’s seat
The latest pattern could be explained by a slower price increase in recent months and a higher number of short-term holders realizing profits. This assumption is confirmed by looking at HODL waves, which visualize for how long Bitcoin is held.
The redder the color, the shorter the holding period. It becomes visible that it is short-term holders, who have held Bitcoin for between one week and three months, who have been primarily selling into the market as of late.
When looking at the profit-taking behavior of short-term holders only, one could infer that this cohort of traders might almost be done selling. The latest dip below the value of 1 shows that short-term holders have even started realizing losses.
In a bull market run-up, this is usually where a bottom in price can be expected, as selling activity tends to decrease significantly.
However, as bull market tops are not formed by a lack of sellers but rather by a lack of buyers, it is highly important to also look at the trend of the current demand side.
Current on-chain volume activity suggests that the capital inflow trend is still intact. A high number of coins are still changing hands, suggesting that buying activity is still ongoing. The realized price, which expresses this buying activity by valuing all Bitcoin based on when it last moved on a daily basis, gives a good idea of how much capital has moved in and out of Bitcoin.
A steep curve suggests high on-chain transaction volumes. If it is followed by a flat trend, it usually indicates the beginning of the bear market, as not enough buyers are coming into the market and willing to pay higher prices anymore. As long as this steep curve does not flatten, there should be no concern about a dwindling number of buyers.
Although this evidence suggests that the bull market top is likely not in yet, there is also no clear confirmation that sellers are done selling just yet.
A break of the aSOPR 10-day moving average support line could be confirmed in the next few days. This may signal a trend shift in sellers’ behavior from bullish to bearish. Therefore, a negative short- to mid-term scenario should be considered if this occurs.
Support levels in a bearish case
There are two major price support levels to look out for. The first one is around $51,325, which could be a support level where whales most recently acquired a high volume of Bitcoin.
The second price support level is the network-value-to-transactions (NVT) ratio price, which is currently at $47,679 and is a major price support level in Bitcoin bull markets.
If the market price were to fall significantly below the NVT price without a quick recovery within a few days, a detailed analysis of the demand side would be needed to judge if the market’s bullish structure has broken.
Market at a critical level, with strong support between $47,000 and $51,000
The supply side suggests that sellers are currently in the driver's seat, even selling Bitcoin at a loss in the past few days. However, their selling activity is expected to significantly reduce over the next few days if current behavior stays in line with prior bull market sell-offs.
If that is not the case, the breakdown of the aSOPR seven-month support line is likely and could signal a trend shift from bullish to bearish selling. Further downside should be expected, with the next major support in the range of $47,000 to $51,000.
On the demand side, the capital flow still looks healthy. Enough volume is still willing to pay current prices, while whales have ramped up their buying again. Current price action is still above the NVT price, which suggests that current price fluctuations are still within the expected bullish territory.
Nevertheless, the demand side should be watched closely for a potential dry-up in on-chain volume over the next few days if the price comes close to the NTV price.
The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Nothing here should be considered investment or trading advice. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Every investment and trading move involves risk. The author owns Bitcoin. You should conduct your own research when making a decision and/or consult with a financial advisor.
Investors’ on-chain activity hints at Bitcoin price cycle top above $166,000
The Bitcoin cycle top would likely come in at price levels above $166,000 per coin if history repeats.
After breaking out of the two-months ascending triangle, the price of Bitcoin (BTC) is firmly staying above $60,000. Current on-chain volume suggests investors are still strongly buying Bitcoin at current price levels.
Furthermore, the current price is not even close to a short-term price top when comparing to historic network valuation multiples.
BTC price bull run not overheated, investor activity shows
While bear market bottoms often coincide with seller exhaustion, bull cycle tops happen to occur with buyer exhaustion. Watching long-term investor activity during the different stages in a bull market proved to be a good indicator for BTC price support levels and overheated conditions in the past. Current investor activity suggests that the market price is far from overheated.
On-chain analyst Willy Woo, who developed a methodology to measure this activity, describes it as follows:
“Investor activity” is predicated on on-chain volume. This is because when BTC moves between wallets between two different participants, we assume there was a payment for it off-chain (fiat or alt-coin). It’s an imperfect measure but approximates what’s going on.
The investor activity, expressed in on-chain volume is then multiplied by the 2-year moving median of the "Network Value" over "Transactions" (NVT) and is then divided by the circulating supply. The price that is derived through this methodology is called "NVT Price."
NVT price does not only give a good indication of how much volume is willing to pay current prices but it can also be used as an estimate of the price floor in a bull market due to the long-term moving average of NVT. Therefore, NVT could also be called the valuation multiple of the network derived from transaction volume or could be thought of as the PE, or "price to earnings," ratio of Bitcoin.
NVT premium says short-term top possible at $95K
The market price rarely dipped below the NVT price during a bull market. If it did, it proved to be an excellent buying opportunity. The current NVT Price is $47,500. Based on yesterday's closing price of $61,600 per Bitcoin, the market is willing to pay a premium of 1.3 times the current long-term investor valuation. This multiple is called the NVT premium.
During prior bull markets, NVT premiums above 2 turned out to be short-term price tops, and above 3.5 marked the top of a bull market. Currently, this metric suggests that the current NVT premium of 1.3 is nowhere near prior bull market tops.
Based on the current NVT price of $47,500, the next major short-term top with an NVT premium of 2 could likely be at or above $95,000 while a potential cycle top, with an NVT premium of 3.5, could be at or above $166,300.
Current NVT premium suggests more upside potential
While an NVT premium of 1.3 may see a short-term drop in the price by 30% or more, the multiple also shows that it would be at least another 54% price increase from yesterday's closing price to reach a potential short-term cycle top.
However, this assumes that history will repeat again and that similar NVT premiums as in prior bull markets would be reached again. Neither is guaranteed, of course. Nevertheless, if this phenomenon were to repeat, the risk-to-reward ratio certainly favors the upside.
What's more, a $166,000 price tag may actually be a fairly conservative prediction, according to Woo. As Cointelegraph previously reported, the analyst explained that BTC price could also reach as high as $300,000 by December 2021, based on other metrics.
The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Nothing here should be considered investment or trading advice. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Every investment and trading move involves risk. The author owns Bitcoin. You should conduct your own research when making a decision and/or consult with a financial advisor.
Bitcoin on-chain data suggests no bull market top at $60K, selling activity declining
Bitcoin on-chain data reveals that speculators and long-term holders have become increasingly confident of higher prices as their selling activity has slowed down significantly.
For the very first time in a Bitcoin (BTC) bull market, not only long-term investors but also short-term speculators who usually add to the daily sell pressure toward the end of a market cycle have become increasingly confident of higher prices as they hold on to their Bitcoin.
This only adds to the already existing supply shock. If demand remains strong, this is a recipe for another leg up for the BTC price.
Bitcoin selling activity is declining again
Every Bitcoin bull market usually coincided with an increasing number of short-term speculators coming into the market hoping to turn a quick profit, while long-term speculators start to add sell pressure toward the second half of the market cycle to realize their profits.
One of the best on-chain indicators to see this trend unfold in each cycle is called HODL waves. Hereby, the length at which each BTC address holds Bitcoin before they are sold into the market is clustered into term buckets that are then visualized in different color bands.
For example, someone who held on to their Bitcoin for five months would fall into the 3m-6m bucket, the light orange color band. If that person decides to sell, it falls out of that bucket and would show up in the 24h-term bucket, the dark red color band.
This means, the redder the colors are in the HODL waves chart on a respective date, the more short-term turnover of Bitcoins happens. This activity is almost at its lowest during a bear market, and at its highest during a bull market, while the short-term activity tends to peak around a bull market top.
Reflecting realized value in HODL waves is critical
Since the Bitcoin price fluctuates significantly during the market cycles, and HODL waves only account for the absolute number of Bitcoins moved, this chart does not account for the total value realized on a respective day by a Bitcoin seller.
As it becomes increasingly lucrative for hodlers to take profit the higher the price rises, the HODL waves can be weighted by the realized price, which is the price at which each Bitcoin on average was last bought /sold.
This adjustment allows for visualizing the value-driven profit-taking on a daily basis through the value-adjusted colored, term buckets.
Bitcoin cycle tops tend to form around the short-term activity peak
Once HODL waves are weighted by the realized price, the Realized Cap HODL Waves are derived, a concept that was first introduced by on-chain analyst Typerbole. This adjustment reveals that the 1w-1m bucket tops coincide with every single bull market top so far.
This indicator does not only suggest that the current selling activity is not at a typical bull market peak yet, it even reveals that for the first time in Bitcoin's bull market history this trend is declining while the price continues to rise.
This is a very unusual trend in a bull market. Assuming that the price peak has not been reached yet, this suggests that profit-seekers, whether they are short- or long-term focused, are starting to hold on to their Bitcoin again, expecting higher prices to come and by that adding to the Bitcoin supply squeeze on exchanges.
Bitcoin selling activity relative to the holding period is quite low
Rafael Schultze-Kraft, Glassnode CTO, takes a similar view by looking at long-term hodlers through Coin Days Destroyed, an indicator that shows the total holding days "destroyed" by holders selling their Bitcoin.
Based on a 3-months moving average of this indicator, the destruction has retraced to a level last seen in the summer of 2019 at times where the price peak was already reached.
Ok, this is beautiful.
— Rafael Schultze-Kraft (@n3ocortex) April 9, 2021
Experimenting with Coin Days Destroyed: Despite $BTC prices above $50k, 3-month CDD at low levels and recently declining.
Old hands extremely strong here, HODLers showing conviction and doing what they do best.
Doesn't look like a top to me.#Bitcoin pic.twitter.com/z8OL8Gt73E
If the price was close to a bull market peak, a much higher indicator value would be expected as long-term holders would be taking profit in material size, which is currently not the case.
Bitcoin spending behavior relative to the market cap is low
When taking this concept of Coin Days Destroyed further and looking at it with respect to average value destroyed in perspective to the market capitalization, one arrives at the so-called dormancy flow. This is a concept invented by analyst and trader David Puell.
The dormancy flow describes the yearly moving average of Bitcoin holders’ spending behavior. It is based on the held value that gets destroyed in perspective to the overall accrued value in the market.
This indicator suggests, the 365-day average spending behavior of Bitcoin measured in USD is very healthy and far below prior bull market spending.
This is Bitcoin rocket fuel
Bitcoin selling activity whether it is from speculators or long-term holders is declining while also the annual spending behavior relative to the market capitalization is surprisingly low. All these on-chain data points suggest that the market is inching to an even deeper supply squeeze. This is one of the best rocket fuels to send the Bitcoin price higher.
However, this is not a guarantee as it requires continuous demand for the price to appreciate in this environment. Therefore, a close eye on high-net-worth individuals and institutions' demand should be kept, as they have recently been the main driver on the buyer side.
The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Nothing here should be considered investment or trading advice. Every investment and trading move involves risk. The author owns Bitcoin. You should conduct your own research when making a decision and/or consult with a financial advisor.