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Crypto exchange Coincheck plans Nasdaq listing in July 2023

The company’s financial statements showed a decline in operating revenue and income due to the crypto bear market.

Japanese cryptocurrency exchange Coincheck has confirmed plans to pursue a public stock offering in the United States through Nasdaq — a move that would give the company access to the country’s lucrative capital markets. 

In documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Oct. 28, Coincheck’s majority owner, Monex Group, confirmed that it is proceeding with Nasdaq listing procedures through a merger with special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Thunder Bridge Capital Partners IV. If all goes according to plan, Coincheck’s Nasdaq listing will take place on July 2, 2023.

Coincheck said the SPAC merger would allow the exchange to expand its crypto-asset business and gain direct access to U.S. capital markets. The technology-rich Nasdaq is one of the world’s largest stock exchanges by volume and market capitalization.

As reported by Cointelegraph, Coincheck announced its public-listing ambitions in March of this year. At the time, the value of its merger with Thunder Bridge Capital was reported to be $1.25 billion.

According to Coincheck’s financial statements, the company has 1.75 million verified accounts, representing 27% of Japan’s crypto trading market share. However, the company reported a loss in trading volume due to the crypto bear market. Total operating revenues declined by roughly half quarter-on-quarter.

Related: Bitcoin weak hands ‘mostly gone’ as BTC ignores Amazon, Meta stock dip

Several crypto-oriented companies have expressed a desire to go public through SPAC agreements. In April, Bitcoin (BTC) mining company PrimeBlock announced it would go public via a $1.25 billion SPAC. In August, blockchain cloud infrastructure provider W3BCloud unveiled an identical price tag for its SPAC merger. Stock and crypto exchange eToro had plans for a $10 billion merger before terminating the agreement over the summer.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

3 striking similarities with past Bitcoin price bottoms — But there’s a catch

The fundamentals accompanying the previous Bitcoin bear markets are entirely different from 2022, however, putting the BTC price recovery at risk.

Bitcoin (BTC) has been consolidating inside the $18,000–$20,000 price range since mid-June, pausing a strong bear market that began after the price peaked at $69,000 in November 2021.

Many analysts have looked at Bitcoin’s sideways trend as a sign of a potential market bottom, drawing comparisons from the cryptocurrency’s previous bear markets that show similar price behaviors preceding sharp bullish reversals.

Here are three strikingly similar trends that preceded past market bottoms.

2018’s sideways trend for BTC price

The 2018’s Bitcoin bear market serves as a major cue for a potential market bottom in 2022 if one looks at its eerily similar price trends and indicators.

One of the key indicators is Bitcoin’s 200-week exponential moving average (200-week EMA; the blue wave in the chart below). In 2018 and 2022, Bitcoin entered a long period of sideways consolidation after closing below its 200-week EMA.

BTC/USD weekly price chart featuring 2018 bear market fractal. Source: TradingView

Except in 2018, Bitcoin’s sideways trend lasted for 1 days, with the price reclaiming its 200-week EMA as support, followed by moves toward approximately $14,000 in June 2019. In 2022, the sideways trend entered its 19th day on Oct. 28 but awaits a clear breakout above the 200-week EMA near $26,000.

Additionally, Bitcoin’s weekly relative strength index (RSI) hints at a potential bottom formation. In 2018, the RSI’s drop into its oversold territory (below 30) was followed by the BTC’s price sideways trend and eventually by a fully-fledged bullish reversal.

That is halfway similar to Bitcoin’s RSI trend in 2022, given it slipped below 30 in June and followed up with Bitcoin’s sideways price action between $18,000 and $20,000 levels. That could follow up with a bullish reversal phase if the 2018 fractal is repeated.

2013–2015 bull trap support

Bitcoin’s 2022 bear market also shares similarities to the price trends witnessed in 2013–2015, comprising a descending trendline resistance, a weak bull trap support trendline and a horizontal support level.

BTC/USD weekly price chart featuring 2014–2015 bear market fractal. Source: TradingView

BTC’s price dropped 82% from its December 2013 top of around $1,200.

In doing so, Bitcoin attempted to close thrice above its descending trendline resistance (marked with A, B and C in the chart above). Simultaneously, the price drew limited support from another descending trendline, resulting in bull trap rallies.

Bitcoin eventually bottomed at a horizontal trendline support near $200, following it up with a strong breakout above the descending trendline resistance, reaching the 0.236 Fib line of $429. By December 2017, its price had reached nearly $20,000.

Bitcoin 2013–2015 bear market on weekly chart (zoomed version). Source: TradingView

In 2022, Bitcoin’s price has ticked all the boxes regarding mirroring its 2013–2015 bear market, except for the breakout above the descending trendline resistance.

Bitcoin 2022 bear market on weekly chart (zoomed version). Source: TradingView

Thus, BTC/USD could see a rally toward $30,000, the 0.236 Fib line, in early 2023 if the breakout occurs.

Bitcoin MVRV-Z score

From an on-chain analysis perspective, Bitcoin’s 2022 downtrend has made it as undervalued as it was at the end of previous bear markets.

For instance, Bitcoin’s Market Value-to-Realized Value (MVRV) Z-score, which measures the coin’s over/undervalued relative to its “fair value,” has dropped into the region that has coincided with previous bear market bottoms, as shown below.

Bitcoin MVRV-Z Score vs. market bottoms. Source: Glassnode

The on-chain indicator increases Bitcoin’s possibility to bottom inside the $18,000–$20,000 region — in line with the two fractals discussed above.

Different this time? 

Unlike previous years, Bitcoin’s 2022 bear market occurred primarily due to the United States Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes in response to persistently higher inflation

The U.S. central banks tightening measures removed excess cash from the economy, thus leaving investors with little capital to speculate on risk-on assets. As a result, Bitcoin fell alongside U.S. stocks with a strong correlation coefficient of 0.80 as of Oct. 28. 

Related: Bitcoin mirrors 2020 pre-breakout, but analysts at odds whether this time is different

Previously, the Bitcoin market recovered weeks or months after its correlation with U.S. stocks dropped below zero. The chart below shows four instances from 2014–2016, 2017–2018, 2019–2020 and 2021.

BTC/USD weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

Therefore, Bitcoin carries risks of bearish continuation if its correlation with U.S. stocks remains positive.

Meanwhile, over 2,000 CME Bitcoin options contracts expiring by the end of this year show a net bias toward put positions. In other words, traders have been anticipating more downside for BTC price.

CME Bitcoin options position distribution. Source: Ecoinometrics

“Traders see the possibility of Bitcoin sliding towards $10,000 to $15,000 but anything lower than that is given a low probability,” said Nick, an analyst at data resource Ecoinometircs.

As Cointelegraph reported, the $10,000–$14,000 area remains an area of interest for a possible price bottom if a breakdown occurs from the current levels. 

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.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

Bitcoin weak hands ‘mostly gone’ as BTC ignores Amazon, Meta stock dip

Huge tech stock losses, mostly occurring after the Wall Street close, fail to show up in Bitcoin price weakness.

Bitcoin (BTC) is decoupling from big tech as disappointing earnings fail to spark any major BTC price losses.

Economic data for Q3, 2022 saw heavy losses for some tech stocks, but BTC/USD avoided a chain reaction.

Bitcoin hodlers shrug off Q3 tech results

The largest cryptocurrency shed around $800 over Oct. 27, or 3.8%, after hitting its highest levels in six weeks.

At the time of writing, Bitcoin was still around $20,200, offering more consolidatory trading behavior than a major correction.

The same was not true of tech stocks, these led by a dramatic 20% rout in Amazon during out-of-hours trading thanks to missed earnings targets. Amazon's market cap sealed the biggest such post-close drop in history, at over $230 billion.

“There is obviously a lot happening in the macroeconomic environment, and we’ll balance our investments to be more streamlined without compromising our key long-term, strategic bets,” CEO Andy Jassy commented in the firm’s Q3 earnings report.

While evidence of the problematic state of flux experienced by tech giants worldwide this year, Amazon’s comedown notably failed to spark copycat moves on crypto markets.

The same is true with similarly painful results from Meta, the stock price of which fell below $100 to return to 2015-levels this week.

This is a sea change from the end of 2021, economist, trader and entrepreneur Alex Krueger believes, that time marked by heavy price declines, which came in step with poor performance at Netflix.

“Last January Netflix's earnings and its ensuing 20% crash sent $BTC down 20%, $ETH down 30%. Today Amazon's earnings and its ensuing 20% crash sent $BTC down 2%, $ETH down 3%,” he tweeted on Oct. 28.

“Weak hands are mostly gone.”

With that, Netflix is down 50% year-to-date with its current stock price around $300. BTC/USD is down around 6% more, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows.

BTC/USD vs. Netflix stock 1-week chart. Source: TradingView

Correlation has not gone away

The observation feeds into a growing narrative over Bitcoin’s correlation to traditional markets.

Related: A record 55,000 Bitcoin, or over $1.1 billion, was just withdrawn from Binance

The past week has not seen the clear-cut lockstep moves between BTC and equities, with the former playing catch-up as stocks cooled. As Cointelegraph reported, Bitcoin’s growing correlation to gold is now gaining attention once again.

Overall, however, a long-term trend change in correlation with the S&P 500, for example, is still far from being confirmed.

BTC/USD vs. S&P 500 correlation chart. Source: TradingView

"While it's too early to say if this trend continues, it's worth watching," Mario Nawfal, founder of Blockchain consultancy firm IBC Group, summarized.

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.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

Ethereum is ahead of Bitcoin this rally — But ETH price still risks 20% crash against BTC

Ether has entered a bearish range that preceded a 35% price crash in the April–May 2022 session.

Ethereum’s native token, Ether (ETH), recorded better gains than Bitcoin (BTC) over the past 24 hours despite the latter finally rising above the key $20,000 level.

Ether beats Bitcoin in risk-on rally

On the daily chart, Ether jumped approximately 14% to reach its weekly high of $1,554 (data from Binance) on Oct. 26. Bitcoin underwent a similar rally, but its week-to-date profits are just 6% by comparison. 

The ETH/BTC pair gained around 8%, climbing as high as 0.075 BTC on Oct. 26.

ETH/BTC daily price chart. Source: TradingView

The boom across the top crypto assets has been synchronous with the United States stock market’s winning streak since Oct. 24. It also came on the backdrop of a weaker U.S. dollar index, which has been typically trading inversely to the crypto market since March 2020.

Bear fractal alarm

ETH/BTC’s latest price rally has taken it to a range that preceded a 35% correction in the April–May 2022 session (marked as “R1” in the chart below) and was instrumental in limiting its upside prospects in August–September 2022 (marked as “R3” in the chart below).

ETH/BTC 3-day price chart. Source: TradingView

The range coincides with the area defined by ETH/BTC’s 0.236–0.382 Fib lines, or 0.072 BTC–0.077 BTC. Therefore, the pair may stabilize inside the range, followed by a correction toward the 0.068 BTC–0.064 BTC area, its near-term support levels.

Related: Ethereum’s Merge won’t stop its price from sinking

Meanwhile, a decisive breakdown below the 0.068 BTC–0.064 BTC area could expose Ether to fall toward its multi-month ascending trendline, which served as a solid rebound point after the April–May 2022 downtrend.

That puts ETH/BTC’s primary downside target at around 0.059 BTC in Q4 2022, down 20% from current price levels.

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.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

Gold vs BTC correlation signals Bitcoin becoming safe haven: BofA

Bitcoin’s growing correlations with gold, S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indicate that investors see BTC as a “relative safe haven,” BofA strategists wrote.

Despite the ongoing cryptocurrency bear market, investors have been increasingly looking at Bitcoin (BTC) as a safe haven, a new study suggests.

The rise in correlation between Bitcoin and gold (XAU) is one of major indicators demonstrating investors’ confidence in BTC amid the ongoing economic downturn, according to digital strategists at the Bank of America.

Bitcoin’s correlation with gold — which is commonly viewed as an inflation hedge — has been on the rise this year, hitting its highest yearly levels in early October. The growing correlation trend started on Sept. 5 after remaining close to zero from June 2021 and turning negative in March 2022, BofA strategists Alkesh Shah and Andrew Moss said in the report.

“Bitcoin is a fixed-supply asset that may eventually become an inflation hedge,” the strategists wrote. The growth in BTC/XAU correlation is not the only indicator signaling growing investors’ confidence in Bitcoin as a store of value though.

Source: Bank of America

Bitcoin has also been increasingly correlated with major stocks like the S&P 500 (SPX) and Nasdaq 100 (QQQ). The correlation between Bitcoin and both SPX and QQQ reached all-time highs on Sept. 13, the BofA strategists wrote, adding:

“A decelerating positive correlation with SPX/QQQ and a rapidly rising correlation with XAU indicate that investors may view Bitcoin as a relative safe haven as macro uncertainty continues and a market bottom remains to be seen.”

BofA strategists also mentioned massive Bitcoin outflows from exchanges to personal or self-hosted wallets. According to the study, weekly BTC exchange outflows in early October were the largest since mid-June, marking the third consecutive week of outflows. The strategists emphasized that large and continuous outflows to personal wallets indicate limited near-term sell pressure, stating:

“Investors transfer tokens from exchange wallets to their personal wallets when they intend to HODL, indicating a potential decrease in sell pressure.”

The BofA strategists mentioned that the report’s methodology included data from major Bitcoin exchanges, including Binance, Coinbase, Coincheck, FTX, Gemini, Kraken and others.

Related: Bitcoin profitability for long-term holders declines to 4-year low: Data

“The blockchain’s transparency gives us insight into the digital asset ecosystem that's not available in traditional financial markets,” the analysts stated.

The new report comes amid the rising risks of the global economic recession, driving more demand for the inflation hedge. Bitcoin has lost about 70% of its market value amid the massive crypto winter of 2022, triggering more skepticism over its status as an inflation hedge.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

Bitcoin ‘6-8 weeks’ from breakout as Hang Seng echoes Lehman Brothers dip

Volatility is closing in, but traders may have to wait until the end of the year if history repeats itself, one analyst warns.

Bitcoin (BTC) waited for cues at the Oct. 24 Wall Street open as expectations of a breakout ran high.

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

Hang Seng drops most since 2008

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView tracked a mundane trading day for BTC/USD after the pair hit weekly highs of $19,700 overnight.

Despite what Michaël van de Poppe, CEO and founder of trading firm Eight, called “way worse than expected” manufacturing data from the United States, Bitcoin suffered from declining trajectory on the day.

This led on-chain analytics resource Material Indicators to suspect that resistance would remain in place.

“Sunday BTC failed all attempts to reclaim the 2017 Top,” it summarized about the latest 24 hours’ price action as per its proprietary trading indicators.

“The change in the trajectory of Trend Precognition's A1 Slope Line after the D and W close indicates a loss of momentum. Price is currently pinned between the 50-Day MA and the trend line awaiting the TradFi open.”

Van de Poppe meanwhile put the sell levels to beat at $19,600 and $20,700, adding that the U.S. dollar and U.S. bond yields were “showing some slight weakness.”

“Upwards momentum is fading on bond yields,” popular trading account Game of Trades continued.

“When this last happened, the markets went on a big run.”

It was nonetheless macro markets offering clearer signs of volatility to come on the day, specifically in Asia, where the Hong Kong Hang Seng saw its biggest daily drop since the Lehman Brothers implosion in 2008.

Hang Seng Index 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

Game of Trades likewise considered the S&P 500 as a potential source of a “massive move” with volatility increasing.

S&P 500 volatility annotated chart. Source: Game of Trades/ Twitter

"Big expansive move" may be months off for BTC

For Bitcoin, volatility could be a long time coming, as a classic indicator delivers signals seen only a handful of times before.

Related: Least volatile ‘Uptober’ ever — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

As noted by Filbfilb, co-founder of trading suite Decentrader, Bitcoin’s Bollinger Bands continue to contract on weekly timeframes, reaching rare levels.

“The outcome of each example is obviously a big expansive move,” he told Twitter followers on the day.

“The funny part is that in each of the examples, BTC spent 6-8 weeks tightening further from the width level we are now at, before a big expansive move, so I'm afraid there's a good chance this thing winds up further.”
BTC/USD comparative annotated charts. Source: Filbfilb/ Twitter

Whether up or down, Bitcoin’s current increasing correlation with gold was something to take note of, Charles Edwards, founder of asset manager Capriole, added.

“Bitcoin bottoms often align with high correlation to Gold. We have that today,” he declared alongside a comparative chart of previous such periods.

“It is much better when Bitcoin is correlated to Gold. Unshackled.”
BTC/USD vs. gold correlation annotated chart. Source: Charles Edwards/ Twitter

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.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

Small Bitcoin investors stop whales from crashing BTC price below $18K

Bitcoin price has avoided a bigger plunge below $18,000 in recent months, raising expectations that a market bottom is forming.

An army of small Bitcoin (BTC) investors has been fighting with their larger counterparts for months to keep the price above $18,000.

Bitcoin accumulation strong among fishes

Notably, there has been some on-chain divergence between so-called whales (entities that hold more than 1,000 BTC) and fishes (entities that hold relatively smaller amounts of BTC) as Bitcoin continues to fluctuate inside the $18,000-$20,000 area.

Bitcoin fishes have been accumulating BTC during the coin's sideways trend. For instance, the net Bitcoin supply held by addresses with 100-1,000 BTC balance has increased from 3.71 million in June to 3.77 million in October, according to data provided by Glassnode.

Bitcoin supply held by entities with 100-1K BTC balance. Source: Glassnode

Similarly, the supply of Bitcoin held by addresses with a 10-100 BTC balance has also risen from 3 million to 3.15 million in the same period. The trend is similar across the entities holding anything between 0.001 and 10 BTC.

Meanwhile, the same period of Bitcoin's sideways price action has coincided with a decline in BTC supply held by whales. For instance, the Bitcoin supply held by the 1,000-10,000 BTC cohort has dropped from 3.82 million to 3.69 million since June.

Bitcoin supply held by entities with balance 1K-10K BTC. Source: Glassnode

Additionally, the 10,000-100,000 BTC cohort has decreased its Bitcoin holdings from 1.98 million to 1.92 million in the same timeframe.

A basic interpretation of the on-chain data mentioned above is that fishes are more confident than whales about a potential Bitcoin price bottom near $18,000.

But while these small investors may have been absorbing massive selling pressure created by larger investors, the downside risk is historically greater with a decreasing whale population, as shown below. 

Number of Bitcoin whales vs. BTC price. Source: Glassnode

Interestingly, one of the few exceptions is when Bitcoin's reached its all-time high price of $69,000 while the number of whales remained relatively flat. This may suggest that whales are having less influence on the market compared to previous years, particularly as the balance on exchanges continues to hit multi-year lows

BTC correlation with gold rises

Fishes continue accumulating amid reports that investors are viewing Bitcoin as a safe haven asset all over again.

For instance, Alkesh Shah and Andrew Moss, digital strategists at Bank of America, cited Bitcoin's weakening correlation with U.S. stock indexes and strengthening correspondence to gold's price moves as a sign that the cryptocurrency is looking to live up to its "digital gold" narrative in the future.

Notably, Bitcoin's 40-day correlation with riskier markets, such as Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500, has been flattening near 0.69 and 0.75, respectively, which are below their record levels from a month ago. On the other hand, its correlation with gold has surged from zero in August to 0.67 in October.

BTC/USD and XAU/USD 40-day correlation coefficient. Source: TradingView

"A decelerating positive correlation with SPX/QQQ and a rapidly rising correlation with XAU indicate that investors may view Bitcoin as a relative safe haven as macro uncertainty continues and a market bottom remains to be seen," they wrote.

Related: Bitcoin will shoot over $100K in 2023 before 'largest bear market' — trader

Others, however, expect Bitcoin's price will eventually break down below the $18,000-support level. They include independent market analyst Filbfilb who argues that BTC price could drop as low as $10,000, given the tight correlation with risk assets and macroeconomic headwinds.

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.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

Bitcoin mirrors 2020 pre-breakout, but analysts at odds whether this time is different

BTC price performance weakens after another crack at resistance near $20,000, but exchanges are showing a mounting tug-of-war between bulls and bears.

Bitcoin (BTC) failed to break $20,000 despite a new weekly high on Oct. 18 as market watchers waited for action.

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

Bitcoin meanders as stocks climb

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD defying volatility once again on the day.

The pair stayed noticeably stable despite stronger moves for United States equities at the Wall Street open. At the time of writing, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index were up 1.5% and 1.2%, respectively.

“We are now witnessing another well overdue relief rally in stocks,” financial commentary resource the Kobeissi Letter told Twitter followers.

“After over a month of near straight-line down price action, a bounce was needed.”

The post continued with a warning over the upcoming meeting of the Federal Reserve at which a further rate hike would be announced.

“However, as Q3 earnings begin and the next Fed meeting approaches, we are far from the clear. Use stops and don’t get trapped,” it advised.

With the mood still uncertain, crypto commentators thus largely stuck to existing predictions when it came to short-term price moves.

“The area around $19.3K is key to hold and then we can expand to $22.2K,” Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading platform Eight, wrote in part of a tweet on the day.

Popular trader Il Capo of Crypto declared Bitcoin “ready to pump to 20k+,” having already given a target of $21,000 for the relief rally.

Fellow trader Crypto Tony was more conservative on the potential range for BTC/USD in the coming week, flagging the area around $20,000 as a likely place for a longer-term trajectory decision to be made.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Crypto Tony/ Twitter

Exchange activity reminiscent of late 2020

The analysis of exchange order books meanwhile produced interesting conclusions about the nature of the current price setup.

Related: Bitcoin price ‘easily’ due to hit $2M in six years — Larry Lepard

On Binance, the largest exchange by volume, a considerable wall of resistance was active at $20,000, something that on-chain analytics resource Material Indicators likened to November 2020.

At that time, Bitcoin abruptly broke through the $20,000 barrier to begin months of upside to new all-time highs near $60,000.

“The last time BTC had a sell wall this large directly above the active trading range was Nov 2020,” Material Indicators commented.

“It was literally the same amount at the same price level. Over $100M in ask liquidity was eaten to kick off the bull run. Don't think a breakout from here will do the same, but…”
BTC/USD perpetual futures order book chart (FTX). Source: Il Capo of Crypto/ Twitter
BTC/USD order book chart (Binance). Source: Material Indicators/ Twitter

Il Capo of Crypto additionally highlighted activity on the derivatives platform FTX. Traders there had put in strong support, he noted, arguing that this was “pushing the price up.”

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.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

Bitcoin price edges closer to $20K as ‘way worse’ US data boosts stocks

A relief bounce on risk assets looks to enter after Empire State Manufacturing Index numbers for October fall far short of expectations.

Bitcoin (BTC) headed toward $20,000 as United States equities gained at the Oct. 17 Wall Street open.

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

Stocks climb as U.S. dollar heads lower

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD reaching $19,672 on Bitstamp, up 3.5% versus the weekend’s lows.

The pair rose in line with stocks, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index gaining 2.7% and 3.2%, respectively within thirty minutes’ trading.

The action combined with weak U.S. economic data in the form of the Empire State Manufacturing Index, which fell to -9.1 for October, heavily below the forecast -4.3 and September’s -1.5 reading.

“Manufacturing activity declined in New York State, according to the October survey,” the New York Federal Reserve summarized in commentary on the data.

“The general business conditions index fell eight points to -9.1. Twenty-three percent of respondents reported that conditions had improved over the month, and thirty-two percent reported that conditions had worsened.”

Responding, Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, called the results “way worse than expected.”

“Top on Yields & $DXY on the horizon. Bitcoin to rally,” he predicted.

With that, the U.S. dollar index (DXY) continued retracing recent gains on the day, targeting 112 and down 0.65%.

“Risk asset deflation in 2022 and Fed tightening despite the world leaning toward recession portend an elusive end game,” Mike McGlone, senior commodity strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, wrote while summarizing fresh macro analysis.

“The lower-price cure may be necessary in commodities to curtail Fed restraint and plunging money supply. Cooling crude oil may be refuel Bitcoin and gold.”
U.S. dollar index (DXY) 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

Research reinforces impending volatility

While traders were already predicting some relief to hit crypto markets on weekly timeframes, other perspectives reiterated the fact that long term, nothing had changed for Bitcoin for many months.

Related: ‘Get ready’ for BTC volatility — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

“It is very uncommon for BTC markets to reach periods of such low realized volatility, with almost all prior instances preceding a highly volatile move,” on-chain analytics firm Glassnode showed in the latest edition of its weekly newsletter, The Week On-Chain.

Alongside a chart of Bitcoin’s realized volatility, researchers including lead analyst Checkmate argued that the market had reached a pivotal point.

“Historical examples with 1-week rolling volatility below the current value of 28% in a bear market have preceded significant price moves in both directions,” they continued.

Bitcoin 1-week realized volatility chart (screenshot). Source: Glassnode

Concluding, Glassnode acknowledged that despite the fuel for a potential price breakout being there, for example in BTC-denominated futures open interest hitting new all-time highs, there was "little discernible directional bias in futures markets."

"Volatility is likely on the horizon, and Bitcoin prices are not known to sit still for very long," the newsletter stated.

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.

Academic paper suggests governments should attack public blockchains

‘Get ready’ for BTC volatility — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Up or down, it is high time that Bitcoin made a significant move, market participants agree.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week keeping everyone guessing as a tiny trading range stays in play.

A non-volatile weekend continues a familiar status quo for BTC/USD, which remains just above $19,000.

Despite calls for a rally and a run to lower macro lows next, the pair has yet to make a decision on a trajectory — or even signal that a breakout or breakdown is imminent.

After a brief spell of excitement seen on the back of last week’s United States economic data, Bitcoin is thus back at square one — literally, as price action is now exactly where it was at the same time last week.

As the market wonders what it might take to crack the range, Cointelegraph takes a look at potential catalysts in store this week.

Spot price action has traders dreaming of breakout

For Bitcoin traders, it is a case of “almost too quiet” when it comes to the BTC/USD weekly chart.

Having come down significantly in volatile conditions over the first half of 2022, recent months have seen an almost eerie lack of volatility.

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView proves the point — on one-week timeframes, Bitcoin continues to print candles with almost nobody whatsoever.

Such is the stickiness of the current range that, as Cointelegraph reported, the Bitcoin historical volatility index (BVOL) is at lows only seen a handful of times.

“Equity volatility (VIX) relative to Bitcoin volatility (BVOL) is approaching all-time highs,” William Clemente, co-founder of digital asset research and trading firm Reflexivity Research, added in comments last week:

“This illustrates just how much volatility compression Bitcoin is currently experiencing.”

An accompanying chart neatly captured Bitcoin as a curiously stablecoin-esque pick in the current climate, with Clemente implying that a return to the classic, more volatile paradigm should follow.

The week prior, economist, trader and entrepreneur Alex Krueger additionally noted that an “explosive move” had followed all prior trips to macro lows on BVOL.

He argued that United States macro data missing expectations “would do it” in terms of rekindling volatility, but in the event, the numbers remained just short of the trigger range.

Cryptocurrency research firm Delphi Digital agreed.

“Historically speaking, when the BVOL falls below a value of 25, a large spike in volatility tends to follow shortly thereafter,” it stated in part of Twitter comments.

This week, meanwhile, popular crypto investor and analyst Miles Deutscher told traders to “get ready” while commenting on the Delphi data.

Bitcoin historical volatility index (BVOL) annotated chart. Source: Delphi Digital/ Twitter

The question for everyone remained the direction that volatility would take the market in.

For Il Capo of Crypto, the trader who predicted Bitcoin’s descent to $20,000 levels from all-time highs, expectations remained the same.

$21,000 should feature as part of a relief bounce, only to be eclipsed by a fresh dive to multi-year lows for BTC/USD, these potentially coming in at $14,000-$16,000.

“Some shitcoins will experience scam pumps during these days, while $BTC goes to 21k. This could give you the illusion that the bull market is back,” he warned over the weekend:

“My advice: don’t be greedy. Take profits if this happens. Protect your capital.”
BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Il Capo of Crypto/ Twitter

Fresh macro triggers line up for crypto

While little is expected from the Federal Reserve in terms of direct policy changes this week, there is still plenty of firewood for crypto volatility set to be provided by external forces.

In the United States, company earnings will be coming in thick and fast, with tech stocks particularly apt to move markets in the event of results falling wide of expectations.

Reporting firms represent over 20% of the S&P 500, which like other U.S. indexes is showing rare weakness this year.

“In my mind, the odds of a low coming in the next week or two are decently high,” Raoul Pal, founder and CEO of RealVision, predicted overnight alongside an accompanying chart:

“The SPX weekly DeMark hits next week, near the bottom of the channel and the 50% retracement, with RECORD bearish sentiment.”
S&P 500 futures chart. Source: Raoul Pal/ Twitter

Charting the week ahead, financial commentary resource the Kobeissi Letter likewise told subscribers to “prepare for more volatility.”

More U.S. data will join earnings this week, it explained, while Fed officials will comment on overall policy.

“The median bear market with a recession dating back to 1929 has fallen 39%,” it wrote about stock market strength in one of the various posts over the weekend:

“Furthermore, the median bear market with a recession lasts 16 months. We are currently only 10 months in and the S&P 500 is down just 28%. History continues to suggest that more pain is ahead of us.”

Beyond stocks, the U.S. dollar index (DXY) was mercifully motionless into the new week, so far avoiding another attack on twenty-year highs seen earlier.

Echoing Il Capo of Crypto’s theory, Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, hinted that it could be this week or next that “some relief” enters for risk assets more broadly.

“A crucial area for Bitcoin, as it's still hovering in the range for more than a month,” he summarized on the day:

“It needs to break $19.4-19.6K clearly. If that happens, volatility can finally kick in. Given the structure of the $DXY and the Yields, I expect this to occur in 1-2 weeks.”
U.S. dollar index (DXY) 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

RSI breakdown risk echoes 2018

Further out, the picture for Bitcoin becomes murkier, and those divining bearish scenarios from current chart data are busy channeling comparisons to the 2018 bear market bottom.

Among them is popular analyst Matthew Hyland, who even in his characteristic bullish market takes has little to celebrate when it comes to the next few months’ BTC price action.

In a tweet from this weekend, Hyland flagged Bitcoin’s relative strength index (RSI) repeating behavior seen in the build-up to the 2018 floor.

An accompanying chart clearly demonstrated familiar bear market forces in play, adding to suspicions that Q4 2022 could closely mirror the scenes from four years ago.

Trading account Stockmoney Lizards confirmed that it “100% agreed” with the idea, which uses the 3-day chart.

BTC/USD comparison charts with RSI. Source: Matthew Hyland/ Twitter

The 2018 RSI breakout structure involved a dive from $5,500 to $3,100 for BTC/USD — or roughly 40%.

“Obviously, we’re still waiting for this huge move to come,” Hyland added in a related video about the idea.

He additionally showed that the classic Bollinger Bands volatility indicator was still predicting an incoming storm, with narrowing bands demanding a breakout of volatility.

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

Hodlers stay as determined as ever

Taking a look at hodler behavior and it becomes apparent that the resolve of the average long-term holder (LTH) remains steadfast.

The latest data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode confirms a five-year high in the number of Bitcoin either lost or out of circulation in cold storage.

The “hodled or lost coins” metric put the tally at 7,554,982.124 BTC — or 40% of the current supply — as of Oct. 17, meaning that more BTC is off the market than at any time since late 2017.

BTC amount of hodled or lost coins chart. Source: Glassnode/ Twitter

Likewise, distribution is also continuing an accelerating trend visible throughout 2022. The number of wallets with a balance of at least one whole Bitcoin is now at an all-time high of over 908,000.

While increasing overall through the latter half of 2021, the trend has gained noticeable momentum this year, Glassnode shows.

BTC number of addresses holding 1+ coins chart. Source: Glassnode/ Twitter

Analyzing lost coins as part of its weekly newsletter, “The Week On-Chain,” Glassnode, meanwhile, concluded that the current bear market has yet to match others in terms of intensity when it comes to hodlers.

“Network profitability has not quite hit the same level of severe financial pain as past cycles, however adjustment for lost and long HODLed coins can explain a reasonable portion of this divergence,” it explained last week.

Nonetheless, when it comes to those used to hodling through bear markets, it appears that there’s little appetite for capitulation from current price levels.

Fear enters its second consecutive month

There seems to be no shaking the fear when it comes to crypto market sentiment.

Related: ‘No emotion’ — Bitcoin metric gives $35K as next BTC price macro low

In a sign which has captured the industry this year, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index has now had sentiment in its “fear” or “extreme fear” for two months straight.

Fear & Greed uses a basket of factors to compute a normalized score for market sentiment, and 2022 has delivered results unlike most years.

Earlier, the Index saw its longest-ever stint in “extreme fear,” a feat which is currently one month away from repeating.

As of Oct. 17, the Index measured 20/100 — around 10 points higher than classic bear market bottoms but a full 14 points higher than this year’s low.

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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