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Fear and Greed

Bitcoin steps out of ‘Fear’ for the first time in nine months

The Bitcoin Fear and Greed Index reached an index score of 52 over the weekend, marking the first time its hit neutral territory in three quarters.

The highly-referenced Bitcoin Fear and Greed Index moved into neutral territory over the weekend following several months of fear.

On Jan. 15, the index reached a neutral level of 52, its highest since April 5. The move follows a 24% gain for the BTC over the past seven days.

The market sentiment tracker hit a multi-year low of 9 in June 2022. Since then it has been hovering between 20 and 30 in the “Extreme Fear” category. Furthermore, it registered its longest-ever streak of extreme fear in mid-2022, as reported by Cointelegraph.

The fear and greed index uses “motions and sentiments from different sources” including current volatility, market momentum and volume, social media and Google Trends data, among others.

Together, data from these sources is used to create a straightforward number to summarize the emotional state regarding Bitcoin and crypto markets.

It consists of five categories ranging from extreme fear to extreme greed, the latter not been seen since October 2021.

As at the time of writing, the index has dipped back down to 45, which puts it back into the “Fear” category, suggesting that confidence has yet to make a full return.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin has seen its second-longest streak of gains in history with a 12-day run this month. The asset has gained 28% since the beginning of this year, wiping out all losses in the crash that followed the FTX collapse in early November.

The massive momentum has created a large movement in technical indicators such as the RSI (relative strength index) which has hit its highest level for four years on the daily timeframe.

High RSI figures can suggest that an asset is overbought and a correction is due.

Related: Bitcoin fails to convince that bottom is in with $12K ‘still likely’

Several analysts have labeled the recent move as a bull trap but a solid weekly close has led some to believe the momentum will continue.

Professional trader and chart guru Peter Brandt summed it up on Jan. 16, tweeting:

“Any idiot can make wild guesses about markets, so here is my dunce-hat prediction. In reality, nobody has a clue what any given market will do. $BTC.”

Bitcoin was trading up 2.2% on the day at $21,1652 at the time of writing, according to CoinGecko.

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Bitcoin rebounds off 6-week lows amid warning of ‘brutal’ BTC price bull trap

As the U.S. dollar challenges March 2020 highs, all bets are off when it comes to fresh Bitcoin price strength.

Bitcoin (BTC) reclaimed $39,000 on April 27 after another night of pain saw BTC/USD hit its lowest levels since mid-March.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

"All assets suffer" at hands of rampant dollar

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed the largest cryptocurrency trading at $39,200 on Bitstamp at the time of writing, up 2.5%.

Tuesday had seen fresh trouble as soon as Wall Street trading began, Bitcoin following stocks downhill once again to hit $37,700 twice.

Despite that area already being on the radar as a liquidity grab opportunity, some were far from convinced that the sell-off was done.

The current relief, popular trader Kaleo argued, was simply a form of a dead-cat bounce and the real pain would begin when momentum faltered.

"Well, this price action on Bitcoin isn't shouting too much for upside, at this point. Tricky as it's giving back every upwards push again," Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe added.

As throughout the week, the U.S. dollar showed no signs of aborting its bull run, adding pressure to crypto as U.S. dollar currency index (DXY) challenged multi-decade highs set in March 2020.

"The DXY is reaching higher than my base case, due to policymaker decisions outside of my base case," Economist Lyn Alden wrote in a Twitter thread about the phenomenon.

"Therefore, we need to be aware of the market issues that occur when this happens. It's no milkshake (eg US increases rates and gets equity buy-in) but rather, all assets suffer."
U.S. dollar currency index (DXY) 1-week candle chart. Source: TradingView

TradFi and crypto feel the fear

Nerves among crypto and traditional traders alike were thus plain to see, reflected in plummeting market sentiment.

Related: Bitcoin repeats rare weekly chart signal that resulted in 50% BTC price dips

The Crypto Fear & Greed Index reached its lowest level since April 12, which at 21/100 represented "extreme fear" as the guiding market mood.

Crypto Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: Alternative.me

Its traditional market counterpart, the Fear & Greed Index, until recently lagging crypto in "neutral" territory, also fell into line, recording 27/100 or "fear" on Wednesday.

Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: CNN

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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Buy pressure ‘in bull market territory’ — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Is it really different this time? Bitcoin is back at the yearly open, but they jury's out when it comes to what's next.

Bitcoin (BTC) begins the last week of March with a bang after returning to its yearly opening price above $46,000.

In a surprisingly strong upward move for a weekend, BTC/USD began surging upwards Saturday, continuing overnight to challenge its highs from the start of 2022.

Coming against an ongoing macro climate of considerable uncertainty, strength in Bitcoin is naturally being taken with a pinch of salt this month. The reaction is understandable given that previous attempts to break out of its multi-month trading range have all ended in failure.

Despite volatile periods, bulls were always left disappointed and Bitcoin subsequently not only reversed but often revisited the lower end of its range, costing both short and long positions dearly.

Nonetheless, the hope is that this time really will be different — analysts had long argued that only a breakout above the range ceiling, formed by the yearly open around $46,200, would be enough to cause a paradigm shift.

Now that this is in action on the charts, attention is focusing on the final hurdle — cementing these multi-month resistance levels as support.

With the process ongoing Monday, Cointelegraph takes a look at potential triggers that could make or break this important episode in Bitcoin price action.

Bitcoin wipes out the 2022 dip

“Gradually then suddenly” or pure chance? Traders are still trying to make sense of Bitcoin’s newfound strength this week.

It’s been a sight absent from the chart since the New Year — BTC/USD is back at $47,000. After jumping almost $3,000 in 24 hours, the largest cryptocurrency dealt a firm blow to resistance levels which had for months kept bulls firmly in their place.

The significance of $46,000 has been a hot topic for almost as long — a return to the yearly open, many said, would be the signal that Bitcoin was ready for bigger things once more.

Few would have thought that the phenomenon would play out “out of hours,” however, and suspicions over the rally’s real strength are naturally pervasive on social media as the week gets underway, just as they were as the rally itself began.

Nonetheless, even more cautious voices are no longer discounting the potential for further upside, even if longer-term prognosis remains downhill.

“Fundamental buying pressure for Bitcoin has now climbed into bull market territory,” analyst and statistician Willy Woo reported.

Fellow analyst Matthew Hyland, a key supporter of the $46,000 argument, meanwhile gave a target of $52,000 as the next long-term resistance wall to crack.

In Twitter posts, he added that the move was preceded by a breakout on Bitcoin’s relative strength index (RSI) indicator, itself a classic signal of breakout trends.

RSI assesses how overbought or oversold an asset is at a specific price, and in the case of Bitcoin, its score has been climbing off a floor level since mid-January, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows.

Further development of RSI, therefore, could dictate the extent of the rally, as per historical behavioral norms.

BTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp) with RSI data. Source: TradingView

Analyst eyes Bitcoin stocks decoupling

It’s a confusing world out there, and when it comes to how Bitcoin should be acting, the picture does not get any easier.

Inflation, war in Europe and the persistent threat of Coronavirus returning — to name just three major macro triggers — have had commentators forecasting doom and gloom for stocks and risk assets alike in 2022.

Just this month, multiple sources warned that Bitcoin could soon face its Waterloo as a dramatic stocks capitulation sparks another March 2020 moment.

The “easy money” age which followed that event is gone, and only a continuation of quantitative easing would bring back the huge capital flows Bitcoin enjoyed later that year, some argued.

Now, however, Bitcoin appears to be striking out on its own, challenging an intense stock market correlation which in the case of the S&P 500 reached a 17-month high last week.

While the S&P has shaken off the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war and plans for tightening by the United States Federal Reserve, analysis shows that selling has been considerable and shorts are everywhere — the perfect fuel, ironically enough, for a fresh “short squeeze” upwards.

“Risk-on/Risk-off correlations to equities is a short term effect. BTC trades this correlation due to short term speculators,” Woo explained in a recent dedicated Twitter thread on the topic.

“Bitcoin's internal demand fundamentals powered by its adoption curve is more powerful. Eventually the market decouples; the last time was Oct 2020.”

Should speculators have been ruling the roost so far this year, then a return of interest in Bitcoin futures could be a trigger to watch going forward. Open interest in Bitcoin futures is now at its highest since December, data from Coinglass shows.

Bitcoin futures open interest chart. Source: Coinglass

Who wants their money back?

There is another side to the $46,000 story, making it more than just a symbolic level from the New Year.

As noted by on-chain analytics firm Glassnode this weekend, the area around $45,900 is one with a giant amount of prior buyer activity.

Market entrants bought in on the way down from all-time highs, and have been underwater since thanks to it providing the ceiling for Bitcoin’s 2022 trading range.

A return, Glassnode warned, may ruin the mood as a rush for the exit from those buyers plays out.

“The next major on-chain resistance for Bitcoin is the Short-Term Holder Realized Price, trading at $45.9k. This metric is the average price paid for BTC by investors who purchased after the October ATH,” it explained Friday alongside a chart of its long- and short-term holder realized cap indicator.

“Bearish resistance comes from STHs seeking to 'get their money back.'”
Bitcoin long- and short-term holder realized cap chart. Source: Glassnode/ Twitter

So far, short-term holders — defined as entities holding coins for 155 days or less — have not triggered a reversal of direction. The start of Wall Street trading, however, could still produce surprises.

Difficulty should see a new all-time high in days

Bitcoin’s network fundamentals are certainly determined not to disappoint this year.

The coming week will be no exception, as Bitcoin’s network difficulty climbs to new record highs of approximately 28.67 trillion.

The move will follow a month of losses, which as Cointelegraph reported accompanied the results of upheaval for miners operating in Kazakhstan.

Difficulty’s next automated readjustment, however, will not only cancel out those losses but add 4.4% to the existing tally, making difficulty greater than ever before.

Bitcoin difficulty 7-day average chart. Source: Blockchain

The implication of increasing difficulty is essentially that mining for block subsidies has never been more competitive, as evidenced by Bitcoin’s equally bullish hash rate data.

In turn, Bitcoin becomes more resistant to network attacks as an increasing miner presence dedicates more and more resources to competing for the same fixed reward — and thus protecting network participants in the process.

Last year’s 50% hash rate drop, sparked by a crackdown in China which was previously the world’s mining stronghold, now seems nothing more than a distant memory.

An attempt to ban Proof-of-Work cryptocurrency support in the European Union meanwhile failed to gain the support of lawmakers a second time last week.

Hash rate provided by known mining pools sat at around 219 exahashes per second (EH/s), according to data from monitoring resource MiningPoolStats, itself the highest level ever recorded.

Greed is back for the first time since $60,000

Bearish at the bottom and bullish at resistance — it’s a classic market sentiment feature which plays out time and time again.

Related: Top 5 cryptocurrencies to watch this week: BTC, ADA, AXS, LINK, FTT

For the first time in 2022, however, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index has laid out just how exuberant the average crypto investor is feeling.

For the first time since just after Bitcoin’s most recent all-time highs of $69,000 in November, the classic sentiment indicator has entered “Greed” territory.

Its transformation, like sentiment itself this month, has been impressive. Just a week ago, it measured the mood as a normalized score of 22/100 — not just “fear,” but “extreme fear.”

Now, it is hot on the way to showing the opposite, and as long-term investors know, sustained rallies tend only to come alongside gradual increases in sentiment.

Some of them, however, remain clearly excited to see what happens next.

“The crypto markets on a steady uptrend while the supply shock kicks in. It will only take one bullish event to send this back to all-time highs,” JRNY Crypto argued Sunday.

“Watch how crazy things get when the sentiment goes from fear to greed while supply is limited.”
Crypto Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: Alternative.me

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 sentiment in ‘wild’ divergence from reality as $53K BTC triggers ‘extreme fear’

Bitcoin price action is just 20% from all-time highs, but the market has reentered "extreme fear" for the first time since $43,000.

Bitcoin (BTC) has stabilized at around $55,000 after dropping by $6,000 in a single day — but crypto market sentiment is still in shock.

According to the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, as of Nov. 27, emotions are now at the most fearful since late September.

Crypto sentiment dives into "extreme fear"

Fear & Greed, which takes a basket of factors to compute a standardized sentiment score for crypto markets from 1-100, currently sits at 21.

Friday took its toll on the metric, the score more than halving in 24 hours from its previous position of 47.

Those two readings correspond to sentiment going from "neutral" to "extreme fear" — missing out the "fear" zone altogether.

Crypto Fear & Greed Index. Source: Alternative.me

While an expected reaction, the upheaval apparent the emotional state of market participants is becoming a source of amusement for some familiar names.

Investor and entrepreneur Alistair Milne noted that "extreme fear" is hardly an appropriate reaction to BTC/USD trading at $54,000. Indeed, the last time that the Bitcoin spot price was at those levels in mid-October, Fear & Greed measured 78 — "extreme greed" territory.

"This much fear and we are at $54k. Wild," he summarized

On Sept. 30, when the Index last hit 21/100, BTC/USD traded at around $43,800 on Bitstamp.

BTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

Funding rates see overnight reset

As Cointelegraph reported, the latest and deepest phase of the BTC price correction came as trader habits on exchanges stayed curiously optimistic.

Funding rates, being positive despite Friday's move, showed that market expectations were for a swift recovery.

Related: Bitcoin reverses ‘bear market’ at $53.5K as Pfizer gains on fresh panic over coronavirus ‘Nu’ variant

At the time of writing on Saturday, however, it seems that the trip to lows of $53,500 was enough to reset the mood — funding rates are now back to normal and show no bullish bias.

Bitcoin funding rates chart. Source: Coinglass

As noted by analytics firm Delphi Digital this week, however, funding remains lower relative to the first half of 2021 — and this may signal a lack of overall direction.

"Funding rates continue to be low on the futures markets. This could be a sign that the shorter-term leveraged traders are still undecided directionally," researchers told Twitter followers.

"Looking back at the start of the year, the bullish run-up has been accompanied by a significantly higher funding rate."

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What Bitcoin correction? BTC price holds $55K despite several bearish indicators

Bitcoin price refuses to pull back despite Bollinger Bands and Fear and Greed pointing to an overheated rally.

Experienced analysts and media outlets including Cointelegraph recently highlighted some indicators suggesting that the Bitcoin (BTC) price rally could be overextended.

Those bearish views include one from Bollinger bands creator John Bollinger, suggesting traders use a trailing stop, as signs of a “top” were building up.

However, it is worth noting that Bollinger Bands and the Fear and Greed indicator are backward-looking metrics. Therefore, those will usually flash overbought levels whenever there’s a 30% weekly rally, such as the most recent one.

As crypto analyst TechDev_52 correctly questioned, there’s no way to know whether we’re entering a large potential correction or a rally continuation.

For example, popular YouTuber and trader Nebraskangooner, shows that the recent $56,000 top could have been the upper range of a bullish channel that has guided Bitcoin since late July.

"Greed" mode can last for weeks or months

Going back to the Fear and Greed indicator, below are some examples that such a metric can sustain overbought levels for longer than three or four weeks.

Bitcoin ‘Fear & Greed’ index (above) and Bitcoin price at Bitstamp (below). Source: btctools.io, TradingView

Notice how between Jan. 29 to Feb. 26, the Bitcoin Fear and Greed indicator remained above 65, indicating traders were overconfident.

The metric uses trading volume, futures open interest, social metrics, and search data to calculate how hyped the market is.

Thus, it took four weeks before a significant Bitcoin price correction took place after the warning sign popped up. Whoever sold in the initial days after the indicator flashes missed the 70% rally that followed.

A similar pattern happened between July 23 and Aug. 25, while the Bitcoin price continued to rally. Yes, a correction will always come at some point, but how many weeks or months later?

Bollinger Bands, a good short-term indicator

John Bollinger is an experienced and well-respected trader, but his indicator is the moving average plus some deviation based on the current volatility. In short, a 30% weekly move will be outside this range most of the time, considering Bitcoin’s usual 4.5% daily volatility.

Bitcoin price at Coinbase using 20-day Bolling Bands. Source: TradingView

Certainly, a minor correction tends to follow through when Bitcoin breaks the upper Bollinger band, but that has absolutely zero correlation to the price some two to four weeks ahead.

The funding rate has been neutral

Lastly, one should analyze the funding rate, a fee charged by derivatives’ exchanges to balance the risk between longs (buyers) and shorts (sellers) as their leverage varies. Sure enough, when a buying spree takes place, the indicator goes up.

Bitcoin 8-hour perpetual futures funding rate. Source: Bybt.com

The current 0.04% average rate per 8-hour, or 0.8% per week, is nothing out of the ordinary. Back in December 2020, for example, it stayed above 1.5% per week for a whole month, and then again in February 2021.

Similar to the Fear and Greed indicator, this metric shows that buyers are getting overconfident as it surpasses 0.10% per 8-hour, but not necessarily an alarming level.

As long as buyers are confident that the rally will continue, paying a 1.5% or even 3% weekly fee won’t force them to close the leverage longs. For example, if a Bitcoin supply shortage on exchanges has caused the recent rally to $56,000 as holders accumulate, there might be room to $80,000 or higher.

However, a crash can be expected if some bearish events occur in the near future, such as exchange-traded fund requests being denied or some draconian U.S. ban on stablecoins. In such an event, Bitcoin will not breach the all-time high, and those backward-looking metrics will finally “work.”

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. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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