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Bitcoin’s sharp fall from $50K linked to stronger US dollar, gold — Correlation shows

The sell-off in the Bitcoin market, in particular, intensified due to excessively leveraged bullish bets.

Bitcoin (BTC) and spot gold hovered below their key psychological levels on Wednesday as a stronger United States dollar weighed on investors’ appetite for hedging assets.

The BTC/USD exchange rate dropped 5.27% to its intraday low of $44,423 but recovered a portion of those losses after reclaiming the $45,000–46,000 range as support. The pair’s recovery also came as an extension to its ongoing rebound from $42,830, a level it reached on Tuesday after falling by more than 18% in the session.

BTC/USD hourly chart. Source: TradingView

Bitcoin’s massive sell-off coincided with a strikingly similar but dwarfed decline in the rivaling gold market. In detail, the precious metal suffered its worst daily drop in a month on Tuesday as spot XAU/USD rates fell below $1,800 following a minus 1.37% intraday move.

XAU/USD hourly chart. Source: TradingView

The large red hourly candle on gold and Bitcoin charts appeared between 10:00 and 11:00 UTC. However, the precious metal consolidated sideways after the big decline in contrast to Bitcoin that extended its downtrend.

In detail, the cryptocurrency crumbled under the weight of excessively leveraged bullish bets. Bybt data showed that about $3.68 billion worth of longs in the Bitcoin options market got liquidated in the last 24 hours, marking it the largest liquidation since June.

Bitcoin liquidations in the past 24 hours. Source: Bybt

Automated liquidations caused additional selloffs in the Bitcoin market, as traders were forced to sell their BTC holdings to cover their margin calls.

Is the U.S. dollar responsible for the big drop?

Worth noting, the sudden drop in Bitcoin and gold prices coincided with a sharp spike in the U.S. dollar index (DXY).

The index, which measures the dollar’s strength against a basket of top national currencies, rose by 0.41% to 92.53 on Tuesday and continued climbing in the ongoing session to settle its intraday high at 92.73.

DXY hourly price chart. Source: TradingView

DXY moved away from its one-month low, benefiting from the rising U.S. Treasury yields ahead of the government debt sale this week, including $58 billion in three-year notes, $38 billion in 10-year notes, and $24 billion in 30-year bonds.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury note yield, which was around 1.32% after Friday’s weak non-farm payroll report, rose to 1.377% on Tuesday. At the time of writing, it stands at 1.351%.

U.S. government bond 10-year yield. Source: TradingView

Mixed outlook until Fed meeting

Rising yields typically compete for haven flows against Bitcoin and gold. But despite the latest climb, they remain below July’s 5.4% core inflation, thus posing non-yielding safe havens as more attractive bets against rising consumer prices.

But with the Federal Reserve planning to start winding down its $120-billion-a-month asset purchasing facility at the end of this year, some analysts believe that bond yields will keep on recovering. In turn, they will provide the dollar a bullish backstop.

Shaun Osborne, chief FX strategist at Scotiabank in Toronto, told CNBC:

“The Federal Reserve we think is still likely to move toward tapering by the end of this year, the U.S. economy is likely to perform relatively strongly, so our view is minor dollar dips, minor dollar weakness is probably a buying opportunity.”

Related: Bitcoin price to hit $100K in 2021 or early 2022: Standard Chartered

Meanwhile, the rising COVID-19 Delta variant threatens to dampen recovery prospects. In turn, it could force the Fed to sustain its expensive bond-buying program, thus keeping a lid on yields and the dollar alike.

As a result, the outlook for Bitcoin and gold looks mixed. The Federal Open Market Committee’s meeting later this month expects to shed more light on the taper timeline.

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Gold, bond portfolios are ‘naked’ without Bitcoin, Bloomberg strategist asserts

The declaration appears as Bitcoin pops back above $50,000, with its addition in a Gold-Bond portfolio outperforming the S&P 500 index.

What is protecting an investment portfolio from potential stock market volatility? As per Bloomberg Intelligence's Mike McGlone, a merged exposure of Bitcoin (BTC), gold, and government bonds.

The senior commodity strategist, who sees BTC heading to $100,000, pitted derivatives in a new report representing the three safe-haven assets against the performance of the S&P 500 index, finding that the trio has been outperforming the benchmark Wall Street index at least since the start of 2020.

Bitcoin-Gold-Bonds performance against the S&P 500 index. Source: Bloomberg Intelligence

The Bitcoin-Gold-Bonds index took data from the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) and iShares 20+ T- Bond ETF (TLT). The three funds enable investors to gain exposure in the market without requiring to hold/own the physical asset.

Bitcoin more profitable than gold and bonds

McGlone noted that Bitcoin did some heavy lifting in making investors' risk-off strategy successful, adding that their portfolios "appear increasingly naked" without the flagship cryptocurrency even if they remain exposed to gold and bonds.

The statement took cues from the performance of Bitcoin, gold, and the 10-year US Treasury yield against the prospect of rising quantitative easing and debt-to-GDP levels. Since March 2020, Bitcoin has risen almost 1,190%, which comes to be extensively better than spot gold's 25.93% spike.

BTC/USD weekly price chart. Source: TradingView.com

Meanwhile, the U.S. 10-year bond yield has jumped from its record low of 0.33% to 1.326% in the same period.

However, despite a healthy spike, the returns on the benchmark government bond have come to be lower than the core U.S. inflation of 5.4%, suggesting that investors who hold bonds as safety against risky equities are making an inflation-adjusted loss.

US consumer price inflation rose to 5.4% in July. Source: Forex Live

As a result, lower yields have created avenues for corporates to borrow at meager rates for expansion, thus giving equities a boost. Additionally, investors in the secondary markets have started moving their capital into non-yielding assets like Bitcoin and gold, anticipating higher payouts.

Yield rebound ahead?

Former bond investor Bill Gross, who built Pimco into a $2 trillion asset management firm, noted that bond yields have "nowhere to go but up."

The retired fund manager said that the 10-year U.S. Treasury note yields would rise to 2% over the next 12 months. Therefore, bond prices will fall due to their inverse correlation with yields, resulting in a loss of about 3% for investors who bought debts all across 2020 and 2021.

Federal Reserve purchased 60% of net US government debt issuance over the past year with its $120 billion a month asset purchase program to boost the US economy. However, in August, the U.S. central bank announced that it would slow down its bond-buying by the end of this year, given the prospects of its 2% inflation rate target and economic growth.

“How willing, therefore, will private markets be to absorb this future 60 per cent in mid-2022 and beyond," questioned Gross, adding that the US bond market would turn into an "investment garbage."

"Intermediate to long-term bond funds are in that trash receptacle for sure.”

Rising rates could threaten to draw capital out of overvalued U.S. stocks. At the same time, as a risk-off trade, funds could also start flowing into the Bitcoin market. Julian Emanuel, the chief equity and derivatives strategist at brokerage firm BTIG, shed light on the same in his interview with CNBC in February. Excerpts:

"This is the environment where that catch-up trade is going to show its ability [...] You’re coming from such a low absolute level of rates that higher rates actually is likely to be supportive for alternatives like Bitcoin."

Related: 3 reasons why a Bitcoin ETF approval will be a game changer for BTC price

To McGlone, the capital inflow into Bitcoin and the rest of the cryptocurrency market, including Ethereum, would be about finding the next-best investment opportunity. He said that digital assets may represent the "higher-beta potential," adding:

"We see Ethereum on course toward $5,000 and $100,000 for Bitcoin."

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Bitcoin price overcomes $50K, stocks slide after disappointing US jobs report

Nonfarm payroll data shows the worst U.S. jobs gain in seven months, limiting concerns of Federal Reserve tapering this year.

The S&P 500 slid to the intraday highs of Sept. 2 while Bitcoin (BTC) climbed to its highest levels in more than three months. The moves came as a key report on Sept. 3 showed that the United States economy added fewer jobs than anticipated, lowering the Federal Reserve's likelihood to start unwinding its stimulus program this year.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed that nonfarm payrolls (NFPs) grew by 235,000 in August, against expectations of 733,000 positions. Nevertheless, the unemployment rate inched lower to 5.2% from the previous month's 5.4%.

Delta variant FUD behind Bitcoin pump?

The hospitality and leisure sector saw no job gains in August, in contrast with its average increase of 350,000 positions per month over the previous six months. Meanwhile, the restaurant sector lost 42,000 jobs, signaling fears about the fast-spreading Delta variant of COVID-19.

Bitcoin rose by 3.41% to $50,961 in anticipation that a slowdown in the U.S. jobs sector would prompt the Federal Reserve to limit its taper tantrum.

Bitcoin 1-hour candle chart. Source: TradingView.com

The world's best-known cryptocurrency struggled in the second quarter of 2021 amid a global economic rebound from the pandemic. It fell from around $65,000 to below $30,000 after facing additional headwinds from a full-fledged crypto ban in China and Elon Musk's anti-Bitcoin tweets.

At the same time, the global economic recovery raised speculations that central banks would unwind their massive monetary support. In the U.S., Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said that the Fed would begin tapering by the end of 2021 if the economy achieves "maximum employment."

But the Delta variant keeps denting hopes of a steady economic and labor market recovery. Moreover, Sept. 3's job data hints that the U.S. central bank will need to continue its $120 billion per month asset purchase program.

The outlook stressed the U.S. dollar lower and sent non-yielding hedging assets like Bitcoin and gold higher.

Bitcoin price daily chart vs. spot gold (XAU/USD) and the U.S. dollar index (DXY). Source: TradingView

"The cross-over above the $50,000 price mark has revealed two crucial discoveries for the digital currency," said Petr Kozyakov, co-founder and CEO of payment network Mercuryo.

"One is that the premier cryptocurrency still has the inherent features that attract investors and buyers, and secondly, the increased price valuation has not yet eliminated the volatility that surrounds the digital asset."

Kozyakov anticipated that loose monetary policies, coupled with Bitcoin's growth as a recognizable financial asset on Wall Street, would push its prices to $55,000 in the near term and $70,000 in the long term.

Unemployment benefits expiring soon

The extremely weak NFP report came just days before the scheduled termination of federal unemployment benefits that the U.S. administration put in place to cushion the economic damage caused by the pandemic.

Moreover, additional aid that gives unemployed Americans $1,200 per month will expire on Sept. 6. That will effectively remove aid to about 7.5 million people as Delta variant cases are rising in parts of the United States.

Goldman Sachs noted that unemployment benefits also kept Americans from applying for jobs throughout July. The banking giant forecasted the Sept. 6 termination to raise nonfarm payrolls to 1.5 million by the end of 2021.

The next Federal Reserve meeting will take place in mid-September and is expected to shed more light on the Fed's taper plans in light of the weaker NFP report.

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

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

MicroStrategy stock flips bullish with MSTR a Bitcoin ‘proxy’ for institutional investors

The bullish setup has appeared after MSTR’s increasingly positive correlation with Bitcoin, the flagship cryptocurrency that has surged 339% year-on-year and is now struggling to close above $50,000.

MicroStrategy’s stock, MSTR, is preparing to undergo a massive bull run in the sessions ahead.

So shows a technical setup, dubbed inverse head and shoulder, that has a history of predicting upside moves with an accuracy of 83.44%, as per Samurai Trading Academy’s research. MSTR appears to have formed a similar bullish structure, as shared by independent market analyst Bob Loukas.

MicroStrategy stock daily chart featuring inverse head and shoulder setup. Source: Bob Loukas, TradingView

In detail, an inverse head and shoulder (IH&S) is when the price forms three troughs in a row, with the middle one (head) deeper than the other two (shoulders). Meanwhile, all the troughs hang by a price ceiling (neckline).

Traditional chartists consider IH&S as bullish if the price breaks above the neckline with higher volumes. In doing so, the price expects to rise by as much as the distance between the middle trough’s bottom and neckline.

Applying the classic definition to the MSTR chart, the next profit target for the stock appears near $1,478, almost twice the current bid range.

Is MSTR a shortcut to gain Bitcoin exposure? 

The upside outlook for MSTR appears as it continues to stay positively correlated to Bitcoin (BTC), a highly volatile cryptocurrency propagated as “digital gold” by its hardcore enthusiasts.

MicroStrategy owns 105,085 BTC worth around $5.23 billion as Bitcoin’s price returns to $50,000. In fact, the Nasdaq-listed company’s exposure to Bitcoin has made MSTR a quasi-proxy for the flagship cryptocurrency.

MSTR daily price chart versus BTC/USD. Source: TradingView

MSTR has gained momentum, especially amid aggressive traders — those with a higher appetite for risks — with its year-to-date returns now at 65.21%.

At the same time, Bitcoin prices have climbed 68.22%, with many analysts now anticipating the BTC/USD rates to have doubled by the end of 2021 and hit $100,000.

But MSTR and BTC/USD showed signs of decoupling after June. In the period, the MicroStrategy stock limited its downside moves against a comparatively aggressive bearish trend in the Bitcoin market. Financial analyst Alexander J Poulos spotted the deviation, noting that it could have been due to Capital Group’s investment in MicroStrategy.

In June, the United States-based financial services company, which runs the American Funds family of mutual funds, bought a 12.2% stake in MicroStrategy. Poulos stressed that Capital Group’s $600-million investment was an indirect way for it to gain exposure to Bitcoin.

“With the SEC not approving a pure-play BTC ETF [exchange-traded fund], MSTR will continue to serve as a proxy for fund families,” he said, adding:

“The move by the Capital Group is not an outlier. I expect others to initiate or add to their existing positions.”

A high-risk play

MicroStrategy has amassed heavy debts to purchase Bitcoin. Therefore, considering it could sell its crypto holdings to respect its financial commitment to bond investors could be a potentially negative event for MSTR.

In his SeekingAlpha op-ed, Joshua Sorto, the staff accountant at MNCPA, wrote that MicroStrategy could easily pay back the debt on its first $650-million convertible note — MSTR is already trading above $517 to convert notes into shares that do not require MicroStrategy to sell the Bitcoin inventory.

But the second convertible note has a conversion rate benchmark set at $1,432.46. That said, MicroStrategy would need to have tripled its market valuation by 2027, which means MSTR would need to rise over 100% before the bond’s maturity.

“In order for MSTR to do that, the analytics business will have to produce cash flows of $125 million per quarter; at the moment, it’s running at less than half that level,” Sorto said while referring to MicroStrategy’s second-quarter earnings.

The third note is not convertible. MicroStrategy has bought 13,005 BTC with nearly half a billion dollars worth of proceeds. So, whether or not the firm will pay off its debt depends majorly on Bitcoin’s performance until 2026.

Related: MicroStrategy stock slides after announcing new $400M debt raise to buy Bitcoin

In its filings with the U.S. Security and Exchange Commission, MicroStrategy revealed a total of 49 risks, 47% of which concerns finance and corporates. Also, the risk tally comes to be higher than the S&P Average of 31. 

MicroStrategy risk disclosures. Source: TipRanks

Poulos admitted that he is bullish on Bitcoin in the coming years, which, in extension, means he is also bullish on MicroStrategy. Sorto also expressed a similar outlook, noting that MSTR’s association with a booming Bitcoin industry would have the stock retain its upside outlook long term.

“There are no storm clouds on the horizon, but a few clouds in the distance are worth monitoring,” Sorto wrote.

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Ethereum price breaks $3,500 and hits 3-month highs against Bitcoin

The second-largest cryptocurrency reaches its best levels against Bitcoin and the dollar in more than three months.

Ethereum's native asset Ether (ETH) has extended its rally on Sep. 1 to log multi-month highs against Bitcoin (BTC) and the United States dollar (USD).

The ETH/BTC exchange rate rose 3.13% to hit 0.07475 for the first time since June 9. Meanwhile, bids for ETH/USD climbed 3.4% to $3,546, the highest since May 18, showcasing a renewed upside sentiment in the second-largest cryptocurrency market after it consolidated sideways for more than three weeks.

ETH/USD and ETH/BTC daily price chart. Source: TradingView.com

Ether's price jump appeared despite a wobbling price behavior across the cryptocurrency market. For instance, Bitcoin prices remained stuck around $47,000 while eyeing a clear breakout move above their psychological resistance level of $50,000.

Similarly, Ethereum's top rival Cardano (ADA) also consolidated sideways following its 100%-plus price rally in August, while its market dominance fell from 4.54% between Aug. 8 to 4.26% at the time of writing.

Cardano prices versus its market dominance against all the cryptocurrencies. Source: TradingView.com

The same period witnessed Ethereum's market dominance rising from 18.17% to 19.65%, hinting that Ether attracted capital out of assets with interim overstretched valuations.

Hodling detected

Ethereum's run up above $3,500 coincides with a decline in ETH reserves across all exchanges.

Blockchain analytics firm CryptoQuant reported that the amount of Ether held in exchange wallets has declined from 19.45 million on Aug. 18 to 18.75 million today.

However, analysts perceive falling reserves as bullish, arguing that traders primarily withdraw their coins from exchanges because they choose to hold them instead of selling them for other assets.

Ethereum balance across exchanges drop as ETH/USD rise. Source: CryptoQuant

Additionally, more upside cues for Ether prices have emerged due to supply squeeze prospects.

CryptoQuant data shows that more than 6% of Ether's supply now stands locked inside the Ethereum 2.0 smart contract, i.e., about 7.28 million ETH, worth $25.77 billion at current exchange rates.

Total value staked in Ethereum 2.0 smart contract exceeds $25 billion. Source: CryptoQuant

Additionally, a new Ethereum network update, dubbed "London Hard Fork," has introduced a protocol that burns a fraction of its gas fees. Since its introduction on Aug. 5, the so-called EIP-1559 has removed 156,986 ETH worth over $555 million out of supply, per data provided by WatchTheBurn.com.

Demand prospects against supply squeeze

Ether has already climbed over 380% in 2021, its gains boosted by the emerging decentralized finance (DeFi) and nonfungible token (NFT) sector. In comparison, Bitcoin has gained 62% year-to-date against the dollar. 

Payal Shah, director of equity and cryptocurrency product development at CME Group, noted that Ethereum is equivalent to DeFi, a sector that enables users to trade, as well as borrow and lend directly assets to one another without involving central authorities like banks.

"Ethereum hosts more than 200,000 ERC tokens, some of which are part of the top 100 largest cryptocurrencies," Shah wrote in a note published mid-August.

"Together, with the accessibility of DeFi and the draw of better interest rates, more and more retail consumers will likely turn to the DeFi space."

Data tracker Dapp Radar reports that the total value locked inside Ethereum-backed DeFi protocols has crossed $100 billion.

Cardano rivalry

But Ethereum is racing against a long list of rivals as it grapples with network congestion and higher fees issues. For instance, Cardano employs a dual-layer design to perform computations and settlements separately and thus solve the network congestion issues.

Additionally, Cardano consumes almost no energy due to its PoS system. Ethereum expects to switch fully to proof-of-stake by 2022-2023, which gives Cardano and similar Ethereum rivals a lot of room to grow.

But Ethereum has a first-mover advantage in the blockchain space, compared to Cardano, which has very few decentralized applications to show.

Related: Institutions remain bullish on Cardano and Ether, while BTC outflows persist

"Ethereum is the place to be, already boasting thousands of DApps," said investment analysts at the Value Trend, adding that: 

It simply makes more commercial sense, at the moment, to build an app on Ethereum.

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Ethereum price poised for 40% rally vs. Bitcoin after breaking out of four-month range

The Ethereum blockchain native asset broke its downward sloping resistance trendline to the upside, triggering a textbook bullish outlook.

Ethereum's native token Ether (ETH) faces the prospect of logging a 40% price rally against its top rival Bitcoin (BTC), per a classic technical pattern.

Dubbed Symmetrical Triangle, the structure develops after the price forms a series of higher lows and lower highs. Doing so results in a convergence of two trendlines with a degree of symmetry, which appears like a Triangle.

Analysts treat Symmetrical Triangles as trend continuation indicators, i.e., they usually send prices in the direction of their previous trend following a clear breakout. As a result, the ongoing ETH/BTC price boom expects to undergo an upside continuation after having fluctuating inside a similar Triangle structure for the last four months.

ETH/BTC weekly chart featuring a Symmetrical Triangle setup. Source: TradingView.com

Part of the reason is Ether's attempt to break above its Triangle consolidation setup, after rising seven weeks in a row by 179%. If it does, the ETH/BTC exchange rate could rise by as much as the Triangle's maximum height (~0.025 BTC) from the point of its breakout (~0.069 BTC).

That puts the pair's profit target near 0.094 BTC, about 40% above 0.069 BTC.

Ether's outperformance 

Ether's bullish outlook against Bitcoin emerges as it outperforms the benchmark cryptocurrency in dollar terms on an intraday basis.

On Tuesday, the ETH/USD exchange rate rose 6.61% to $3,442, its highest level in three months. Comparatively, Bitcoin posted dwarfed gains, rising only 2.5% to $48,169, portraying a higher interim demand for Ether tokens among traders.

ETH/USD versus BTC/USD daily chart. Source: TradingView.com

Dmitry Mishunin, founder and CEO of smart contract audit firm HashEX, projected Ethereum and similar "smart contract-enabling blockchains" to keep outperforming Bitcoin in the long run, citing their superior utility.

"The duo of Cardano and Ethereum has the propensity to harbor countless innovative projects," Mishunin said, adding that Ethereum has the potential to flip Bitcoin in the long run.

"Bitcoin only relies on its capped supply and the first-mover advantage, a trend many investors are beginning to substitute for unique technology that can drive a blockchain-dominated future."

Jon Ovadia, founder, and CEO of crypto exchange Ovex, also said that Ethereum has better fundamentals than Bitcoin at this moment, largely due to its recent network update that aimed to add deflationary pressure to Ether through a fee-burning mechanism.

Thus far, about 146,878.7 ETH (worth approximately $492.3 million) have been burnt from the total circulating supply," Ovadia said, adding that:

"The potential for a more superior Proof-of-Stake infrastructure through the highly anticipated launch of Ethereum 2.0 will also make the blockchain more usable, thus driving the coin’s utility and its price growth."

Bitcoin outlook, meanwhile

So far into 2021, Ether has grossly outperformed Bitcoin due to its incremental adoption in the booming decentralized finance and nonfungible token industries. As it stands on Tuesday, the year-to-date profits for Ether are 373% versus Bitcoin's 63.55%.

Related: Bitcoin rejects $51K after Michael Saylor reveals new BTC purchase — What’s next?

Nevertheless, Mike McGlone, the senior commodity strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, said Bitcoin would eventually catch up to Ethereum's gains, thus leading to $100,000 by the end of 2021, more than double where it is trading at the time of writing.

Fundstrat Global Advisors’ Tom Lee also envisioned a six-figure bid for Bitcoin as long as it stays above its average price over the last 200 days — a long-term momentum measure.

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Bitcoin whales join ‘small fish’ in buying BTC as price holds above $47K

Bitcoin addresses holding 1,000–10,000 BTC have resumed accumulating coins.

Rich crypto investors are turning their attention back to Bitcoin (BTC) as its price continues to eye a breakout move above $50,000.

Crypto-focused newsletter Ecoinometrics reported positive changes in Bitcoin holdings for addresses controlling 1,000–10,000 BTC. So, based on their rising account balances throughout August, Ecoinometrics spotted a renewed accumulation sentiment among “whales,” hinting that wealthy investors consider the current Bitcoin price levels as attractive to place bullish bets.

Bitcoin accumulation trend vs. price levels. Source: Ecoinometrics

The sentiment appeared the same among small fish — Bitcoin investors who hold less than 1 BTC. Ecoinometrics reported that they have been accumulating Bitcoin since June and, during a period, have also absorbed the selling pressure coming from the whales’ side. Their buying sentiment coincided with a price rally to $50,000, a key psychological resistance level.

“Recently, there has been some on-chain divergence between small fish who are accumulating coins [and] whales who are offloading coins,” tweeted Ecoinometrics on Sunday.

“That’s not ideal [for supporting] Bitcoin’s price, but it looks like things are changing! Whales are ticking back up.”

Supportive data

Blockchain analytics platform Glassnode also reported a spike in buying sentiment among small fish. In detail, the number of addresses holding at least 0.1 BTC reached a three-month high of 3,231,069 on Monday, further validating the accumulation data above.

Number of Bitcoin addresses holding over 0.1 BTC. Source: Glassnode 

Meanwhile, Glassnode’s unspent transaction output (UTXO) data alert presented the $45,000–$50,000 range, wherein whales capitulated the most recently, as a strong support area.

“Over 1.65M BTC now have an on-chain cost basis within the $45k to $50k range,” the platform tweeted Monday, adding:

“The $31k to $40k zone is also home to another 2.98M BTC, indicative of large accumulation demand.”
Bitcoin UTXO realized price distribution. Source: Glassnode

Bitcoin holds above the “green wave”

The whale and fish alert surfaces as the Bitcoin market awaits a clear breakout move above $50,000.

Related: Bitcoin accumulation accelerates among ‘whales’ and ‘fish,’ while BTC rallies to $40K

As it stands, the BTC/USD exchange rate has been consolidating under the said resistance level since Friday. In doing so, the pair have also found interim support above $47,000, which, more or less, has been coinciding with a 20-day exponential moving average floor (20-day EMA; the green wave in the chart below).

BTC/USD daily price chart featuring the 20-day EMA support. Source: TradingView

Historically, a break below the 20-day EMA prompts traders to move their downside target to the 50-day EMA (currently near $43,500). Popular market analyst Rekt Capital also presented an outlook that highlighted the levels around $43,500 as Bitcoin’s next support range.

Small fish have accumulated Bitcoin relentlessly in the $40,000–$50,000 range, with no signs of trend reversals in the previous 30 days. On the other hand, whales underwent a capitulation period when Bitcoin entered the $45,000–$50,000 range.

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Bitcoin’s key momentum metric just flashed bearish with BTC price pinned under $50K

The relative strength index is making lower highs while correcting from its overbought area.

The run-up in the Bitcoin (BTC) price toward $50,000 last week risks exhaustion due to a mismatch between the cryptocurrency's price and momentum trends.

So it appears the Bitcoin's price and relative strength index (RSI) have been moving in the opposite direction since late July. In doing so, even a strong push higher in the BTC/USD bids has coincided with lower peaks in momentum, suggesting that the pair's upside momentum is weakening out.

Bearish divergence

A normal RSI momentum tends to tail the price action. That said, it rises when the price rises and falls when the price drops. But in some cases, the RSI deviates from pursuing the price trends, leading to a so-called RSI divergence.

Technical analysts consider RSI divergence as a powerful signal to spot price reversals. For instance, a bullish divergence, wherein the price falls and RSI rises, prompts traders to buy the asset in anticipation of a rebound. Similarly, a bearish divergence—featuring rising prices and falling RSI—prompts traders to take profits at the top while expecting a pullback.

The Bitcoin daily chart below shows the cryptocurrency in bearish divergence.

BTC/USD 1D chart featuring bearish divergence. Source: TradingView.com

The downside signal appears as Bitcoin struggles to break bullish above $50,000. As of Sunday, the benchmark cryptocurrency was trading at $48,387, or 4.19% lower from its three-month high of $50,505, achieved on Aug. 3, following a similar 72.36% upside boom.

On the other hand, Bitcoin's daily RSI initially rallied in sync with prices but topped out on July 30, which was way ahead of price, hitting $50,505. Since July 30, the Bitcoin price formed a sequence of higher highs while RSI printed lower highs, suggesting a weakening upside momentum.

A similar bearish divergence between January and April 2021 was instrumental in predicting a Bitcoin price drop, as shown in the chart below.

Bitcoin price-RSI divergence from January-April 2021 period. Source: TradingView.com

Bullish indicators

The bearish divergence signal comes as Bitcoin holds strongly above $30,000, amidst anticipation that it would become a hedge of choice among accredited investors against inflationary pressures.

The perception has led many analysts, including investment researcher Lyn Alden and Fundstrat CEO Tom Lee, to predict a $100,000 valuation for the cryptocurrency in 2021.

On Friday, Bitcoin price shot upward by $1,500 in an hour after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell presented a pro-inflation, dovish policy outlook at this year's Jackson Hole symposium.

As a result, the biggest bullish indicator for Bitcoin remains the Fed's aggressive $120 billion a month asset purchase program, coupled with its near-zero interest rate policy.

Related: Bitcoin price stages a comeback as 3 indicators reflect BTC’s strength

The strong fundamental has prompted technical analysts to envision a long-term uptrend in the Bitcoin market. Namely, independent market analyst Teddy Cleps presented a bullish outlook for the cryptocurrency, based on key wave support that acts as an accumulation area for traders.

Bitcoin 4H chart featuring wave support. Source: Teddy Cleps, TradingView.com

Similarly, Ryan Clark, another market analyst, noted that Bitcoin has been merely consolidating below $50,000 just like when it was trading below $24,000 before the December 2020's bullish breakout.

On the other hand, TraderXO noted that Bitcoin could still fall towards the $39,000-40,000 area but remained convinced that the cryptocurrency would log an attractive rebound from the lower range.

The analyst marked Bitcoin's all-time high near $65,000 as its long-term upside target.

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Bitcoin futures open interest at 3-month highs — But will it be enough to overcome $50K?

The indicators, coupled with a strong bid momentum versus the offers, suggest that Bitcoin’s price could push above $50,000 in the coming sessions.

Bitcoin (BTC) futures open interest has recovered to May levels, raising optimism about a potent bullish breakout move above $50,000.

The total number of outstanding futures contracts on the Deribit exchange reached $1.37 billion on Monday, its highest level since May 27. Meanwhile, the difference between the Bitcoin spot rate and its futures contract price widened, edging up its three-month basis (annualized) back to June levels, data provided by Stack Funds shows.

Bitcoin futures OI and 3-month basis. Source: Stack Funds

The investment management firm saw the recovery as a sign of investors reentering the Bitcoin market while adopting a “more risk-on approach.” According to its head of research, Lennard Neo, the “contango trading” of the Bitcoin futures reflected that “investors’ sentiments remain skewed towards bullishness.” He wrote in a report:

“More importantly, we have observed consistent strength in bid momentum versus the offers, leading us to believe that markets will be well-supported at least in the near term, with further consolidation before breaking $50,000.”

Retail’s influence on Bitcoin’s price

In June, Bitcoin futures collapsed under the weight of a brutal sell-off in the world’s largest cryptocurrency spot market. The downside move from $41,322 to $28,800 expunged the basis trade, wherein a trader buys Bitcoin in the spot market and sells long-dated futures to lock in the disparity between the two prices.

So it appeared, leveraged futures traders unwound their long positions to meet margin calls — that is, via automatic liquidation mechanisms on exchanges. That reduced the gap between the Bitcoin futures prices and the spot, raising fears of negative premium on futures contracts, also called backwardation.

On Deribit, the three-month basis (annualized) was around 2.5%. But in ideal “contango” circumstances, futures should trade at a 5%–15% annualized premium according to the stablecoin lending rate.

Cointelegraph reported that the June drop had less to do with long liquidation and more with miners’ capitulation. It cited China’s crackdown on regional crypto firms around the same time Bitcoin prices plunged, noting that the decision forced crypto miners to shut down operations abruptly and, in turn, sell their Bitcoin holdings en masse to cover losses.

Bitcoin spot rates fell over 30% in just seven days in June 2021. Source: TradingView

$50,000 a psychological barrier

Entering August, Bitcoin has brushed aside most mining concerns, with a recent Glassnode report indicating that miners have started reaccumulating tokens. Meanwhile, persistently high inflation reports in the United States have also boosted Bitcoin’s safe-haven narrative among accredited investors.

Related: Bitcoin set to replace gold, says Bloomberg strategist on Bretton Woods’ 50th anniversary

That partially explains why Bitcoin bottomed out near $29,000 and rose back to $50,000 in over a month. It also underscores the spike in futures open interest and basis trading, signaling renewed buying interest among investors and traders alike. 

But Neo saw a potential glitch. The researcher highlighted Bitcoin’s recent failure to close above its psychological resistance at $50,000, noting that it could put the brakes on its imminent rally. He added:

“The fact that the 3-month basis has not broke June levels and is still way off Apr levels suggests that real demand and speculation remain conservative.”

Bitcoin was trading at $46,888, about 7.78% below its sessional high of $50,505, at the time of 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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets

Bollinger Bands creator warns Bitcoin bulls as BTC price struggles below $50K

"Watch carefully, maybe take some profits or hedge a bit," advises John Bollinger.

Bitcoin (BTC) prices have recovered by more than 60% to $47,486, after bottoming out below $30,000 on July 20, triggering anticipations of an extended bull market toward $100,000. But to John Bollinger, a celebrated contributor to the field of financial analysis, investors should refrain from buying the benchmark cryptocurrency at current prices.

Bollinger advised in his Tuesday tweet that investors could secure their Bitcoin profits or build a hedge position elsewhere to offset potential BTC/USD decline risks. Explaining his cautious outlook, Bollinger noted that "aggressive traders can think about putting out some shorts," which, in turn, could push the Bitcoin prices lower in the coming sessions.

"Hodlers can look [to] add at lower levels if we see them. No confirmation yet, just be on the alert."

Bitcoin could hit $41,000?

The statements appeared as Bitcoin underwent a correction after reclaiming its three-month high of $50,505. In doing so, the cryptocurrency fell up to 6.70% to $47,122, signaling a strong bearish presence around the $50,000 price area.

Scott Melker, the author of the Wolf Den Newsletter, expected Bitcoin to fall towards the $41,000-$42,000 range in the coming sessions. Nevertheless, the independent market analyst asserted that such a pullback would still be healthy—a "heavy load up zone" that would lead to a price rebound.

BTC/USD weekly setup by Scott Melker. Source: TradingView.com

Another pseudonymous market analyst CryptoHamster shared a similar bearish outlook but based his analogy on a technical pattern called Ascending Channel. The pseudonymous analyst illustrated Bitcoin testing the Channel's support trendline for a potential breakout move to the downside. It tweeted:

"Bitcoin could have one more bounce here (chart below) or there will be a breakout to the downside. And it will define the mid-term trend to a great extend."
Bitcoin ascending channel setup by CryptoHamster. Source: TradingView.com

The Ascending Channel short target in the CryptoHamster's BTC/USD chart was below $41,000. 

Bollinger's technical indicator, dubbed Bollinger Bands, spotted Bitcoin holding above the 20-day simple moving average as interim support at around $46,750. Nonetheless, a break below the so-called signal line risked sending BTC/USD toward the lower Bollinger band around $42,670, as shown in the chart below.

Bitcoin daily price chart featuring Bollinger Bands setup. Source: TradingView.com

The $100K Bitcoin predictions

Bitcoin's correction from $50,000 does not necessarily mean the beginning of a bear market, especially as analysts continue to project six-figure valuations for the cryptocurrency.

For instance, Lyn Alden, the founder of Lyn Alden Investment Strategy, told Business Insider that Bitcoin has an incredible potential to reach $100,000 by next year, stating that the cryptocurrency is "still in kind of the early-to-mid stage of its long-term trajectory."

Related: Options traders aim for $100K Bitcoin by the end of 2021, is there a chance?

Bloomberg Intelligence's senior commodity strategy Mike McGlone also envisioned the same price target for Bitcoin in hopes that it would attract capital from the gold market. Iqbal Gandham, vice president of transactions at Ledger, also said Bitcoin would surge to $100,000 in the second half of 2021. He told MarketWatch:

“With all the movement, whether it be noise around ETFs or countries adopting BTC as legal tender, one could easily assume that this is where BTC would rest by the end of the year."

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.

From Premiums to Discounts: Bitcoin’s Wild Ride Splits Global Markets