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Bitcoin’s in a bear market, but there are plenty of good reasons to keep investing

Higher volatility, equity offerings and resistance to regulatory sanctions are just a few reasons why investors should keep an eye on BTC.

Let's rewind the tape to the end of 2021 when Bitcoin (BTC) was trading near $47,000, which at the time was 32% lower than the all-time high. During that time, the tech-heavy Nasdaq stock market index held 15,650 points, just 3% below its highest-ever mark.

Comparing the Nasdaq's 75% gain between 2021 and 2022 to Bitcoin's 544% positive move, one could assume that an eventual correction caused by macroeconomic tensions or a major crisis, would lead to Bitcoin’s price being disproportionately impacted than stocks.

Eventually, these “macroeconomic tensions and crises” did occur and Bitcoin price plunging another 57% to $20,250. This shouldn’t be a surprise given that the Nasdaq is down 24.4% as of Sept. 2. Investors also must factor in that the index’s historical 120-day volatility is 40% annualized, versus Bitcoin's 72%, which is roughly 80% higher.

That’s the core reason why investors should re-evaluate investing in Bitcoin. The risk-to-reward potential after the downward adjustment in risk assets possibly leaves more upside for the cryptocurrency considering three factors: higher volatility during a moderate recovery, equity offerings and resistance to regulatory sanctions.

The problem is the market is now in a drawn-out bear trend and there are no signs that point to a quick recovery because double-digit inflation in many countries continues to pressure the central banks to sustain a tighter stance. Notice below how both Bitcoin and the Nasdaq have struggled throughout 2022.

Nasdaq Composite Index (blue) vs Bitcoin (orange). Source: TradingView

The consequence of raising interest rates and removing debt assets stabilization programs is a recession-like environment. Whether or not a soft landing will be achieved is irrelevant because no sane investor will opt for credit-exposed and growth sectors when the cost of capital is increasing, and consumption is contracting.

Bitcoin can crush tech stocks even during moderate recoveries

Volatility is usually interpreted as negative, considering that the movements in price — either up or down — are accelerated. However, if the investor expects some form of recovery over the next 12 to 36 months, there is no reason to believe that Bitcoin will remain under pressure for that long.

Let's assume a neutral case, such as Bitcoin recovering 25% of the $48,700 drop since the all-time high, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Index not only recovers the entire 24.4% losses year-to-date in 2022 but adds another 40% gains over that 1 to 3 year period.

That scenario would bring Bitcoin to $32,425, still 53% below its November 2021 all-time high. Thus, for those buying BTC on Sept. 2 at $20,250, that number would represent a 60% profit.

On the other hand, under this neutral market, the Nasdaq would reverse its losses and add 40%, reaching 19,563 points and totaling a 64.4% profit. To be clear: that would be 21.6% higher than the current all-time high.

Bull markets can create price ceilings for stocks

The top 7 companies on Nasdaq are Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Tesla, Google, Meta and Nvidia, all well-known tech giants. In stock markets, earnings figures are the most critical metric backing investors' optimism, meaning that higher profits can either be redistributed to shareholders, used to buy back stock or reinvested in the business, itself.

The problem lies when earnings go up, the companies have enormous incentives for issuing more stock, otherwise known as follow-on offers. Moreover, a tech company must constantly acquire emerging niche competitors to secure its leading position. Thus, bull markets create issues of their own, as valuations become too rich and buybacks make little sense.

For Bitcoin, having more miners, investors or infrastructure does not translate to a higher offering because the production schedule has been set from Day 1. The supply is fixed regardless of how the price fluctuates.

Bitcoin was designed to survive regulation and centralization

Nvidia, a major computer chip and graphics card manufacturer, reached a 68-week low on Sept. 2 after U.S. officials imposed a new license requirement for the company's artificial intelligence chip exports to China and Russia. Meanwhile, in mid-2021, China cracked down on mining facilities in the region, causing Bitcoin's hash rate to drop 50% in 2 months.

The main difference in both cases is Bitcoin's automated difficulty adjustment, which reduces the pressure on miners when there's less activity. While the U.S. regulation will likely impact Nvidia's exports, nothing is stopping Taiwanese TSMC chipmaker, South Korean Samsung or Chinese Huawei from growing and exporting products.

Bitcoin is a digital peer-to-peer electronic cash system, so it doesn't need centralized exchanges to survive. If governments opt to ban crypto trading completely, that would only emphasize the importance and strength of this decentralized network. Multiple countries have tried to suppress foreign currency from circulating, only to create a shadow market, with facilitators acting as illegal intermediaries.

Under the 3 different scenarios, varying from total blockage to a generalized bull market, odds favor Bitcoin against tech stocks at the current prices. Consequently, adjusted for its volatility, the risk reward strongly favors the cryptocurrency.

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.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

Bitcoin holds $20K, but analysts say BTC open interest leaves room for ‘more deleveraging’

BTC trades in the lower-end of its 76-day range, but analysts say future Fed actions and record-high open interest increase the possibility of future “deleveraging events.”

Bitcoin (BTC) price continues to struggle at $20,000 and repeat dips under this level have led some analysts to project deeper downside in the short-term. Earlier in the week, independent market analyst Philip Swift tweeted that the Crypto Fear and Greed Index had dropped back to back to “Extreme Fear,” reflecting softening sentiment among investors. 

On Aug 29, analytics firm Delphi Digital highlighted Bitcoin open interest hitting a new record-high and said:

“The Futures Open Interest Leverage Ratio for BTC reached its highest level ever recorded at more than 3% of BTC market cap, following the market-wide collapse on August 26th.”

According to Delphi Digital, “higher values suggest that open interest is large, relative to market size. This implies a higher risk of market squeezes, liquidation cascades or delivering events.”

Bitcoin open interest. Source: Delphi Digital

Exactly what might catalyze such an event remains unknown, but any continuation of the current downtrend in stocks which saw the Dow and S&P 500 wrap up a fourth day of decline to end August at a loss could continue to weigh on Bitcoin price. Data from CNBC shows the Dow closed August down 4.1% and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed the month with 4.2% and 4.6% losses.

Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester also commented that she expects the benchmark interest rate to rise above 4% and she suggested that it is highly unlikely that there will be any cuts throughout the entirety of 2023. 4% is well above the Fed’s target 2.25% to 2.5% range.

Considering how crypto markets have performed since the Fed first began raising rates on July 26, 2022, and the fact that BTC and equities markets reflect a strong correlation, it wouldn’t be surprising to see a long drawn out decline from Bitcoin price over the coming months.

Related: Potential Bitcoin price double-bottom could spark BTC rally to $30K despite ‘extreme fear’

On the other hand, traders appear to still be bullish on the upcoming Merge. Ether and ETH staking-related tokens have held up relatively well since bouncing from last week’s sell-off. After dropping to $1,422 on Aug. 28, Ether has gained 11.3% and trades slightly below $1,600. Lido (LDO), the largest ETH staking service, is up 12% on the day and 32% from last week’s drop to $1.55.

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.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

UBS raises US recession odds to 60%, but what does this mean for crypto prices?

Analysts believe the possibility of a recession in the US is increasing and this could be an important stress test for cryptocurrencies.

On Aug. 30, global investment bank UBS increased its view on the risk of the United States entering a recession within one year to 60%, up from 40% in June. According to economist Pierre Lafourcade, the latest data showed a 94% chance of the economy contracting, but added that it "does not morph into a full-blown recession."

Partially explaining the difference is the "extremely low levels" of non-performing loans, or defaults exceeding 90 days from credit borrowers. According to Citigroup Chief Executive Jane Fraser, the institution "feels very good about" liquidity and credit quality. Furthermore, Reuters states that the financial industry wrote off merely 0.1% of its loans in the 2Q.

The problem is that even in the now-improbable scenario of avoiding a generalized recession, companies will face diminishing earnings as surging inflation limits consumption and Central Banks increase interest rates while winding down their balance sheets. Either way, the pressure on corporate profits is huge and this puts pressure on stock prices.

The valuation dynamics for cryptocurrencies vastly differ from equities, corporate debt, and stock markets. The truth is that there are no set metrics or indicators to guide token prices. Market participants have different perspectives on the protocols and their use cases.

On the other hand, the stock market has battle-tested valuation indicators that have been consistently used for decades, pounded by analysts, pundits and investors. For instance, the Price / Earnings multiple measures how many years would take a company to generate enough profit to cover its current market capitalization.

Regardless of how one measures the stock market success, it depends on margins, revenues, interest rates, and the U.S. dollar foreign exchange rate. That's why a stock can go down 70% or more even before a recession hits the markets, as it desperately needs a constant inflow of revenues. It’s unlikely that the same rationale is applicable to crypto?

Understanding stock markets and commodities valuation

The first rule of equities valuation is: investors have different inputs, expectations, and timeframes for a stock. Sure, there are consolidated models, indicators and analysts' recommendations, but ultimately, there's no guarantee that the equity price will follow any rationale.

We can chart the Price / Earnings multiple, Enterprise Value / EBITDA, or whatever metric investors closely monitor. However, one will never know what the future holds for those companies, even those carrying long-term contracts, such as the energy sector.

Trader’s should not confuse volatility with valuation. A company can have steady and predictable cash flow, but that might become a liability during bull markets when other sectors are growing earnings and expanding. Moreover, a stock market price is never immune to the broader economy because, ultimately, a financial institution's collapse might as well drag down counterparties.

Let's take a simple and utopic example, the New York real estate market. If development enters a grinding halt, there is no change in the utility of the land, including houses, commercial and agricultural spaces. If an aggravated crisis causes the rupture, there's even room for price appreciation since some investors would seek shelter in hard assets.

The same can be said for oil, gold, or cattle. There's no need for a constant flow of earnings to sustain those assets' value. Worst case scenario, no more gold and oil gets extracted from the ground, but their price will likely increase as the currently available supply diminishes.

What are cryptocurrencies after all?

It does not matter whether investors consider Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) as commodities, currencies or novel technology bets. Both assets have extremely limited production schedules, which will be kept even if the hashrate and validators (nodes) drop by 90%. Their use as independent digital asset transmission systems will continue working as planned.

As previously stated, the price of cryptocurrencies might be heavily impacted by an enduring economic recession, but there's hardly a scenario where the networks become useless due to inflation, rising interest rates or credit defaults. The same rule cannot be applied to Walmart, UnitedHealth Group, or Ford Motor Company — all top 20 companies by revenue.

Paradoxically, failing companies are not a suitable store of value during a recession, meaning bankrupt assets can be liquidated and the shareholder gets zero. The decentralization aspect of cryptocurrencies shields investors from even the worst-case scenarios, including delisting from major exchanges.

At the same time, the initial shock of a global recession, for example, the housing market crash and growing distrust in the financial system, could pave the way for alternative hard assets, including cryptocurrencies.

Right now, it sounds like a distant dream, but a full-blown recession would be the first major global financial crisis experienced by cryptocurrencies since Bitcoin's inception in 2009.

Whether or not crypto valuations will sustain themselves in the long run is still undecided. So far, the sector has endured major market participant failures, including exchanges and lending intermediaries and during this time no need for intervention was required. Thus, one could say that it passed its first test, although it’s too early to issue the final 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. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

US dollar hits new 20-year high — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

A familiar tale of losing stocks and a surging greenback greets Bitcoin traders this week as $20,000 fails to sustain as support.

Bitcoin (BTC) heads into the first week of September on a rocky road downhill after United States markets’ Jackson Hole rout.

After the U.S. Federal Reserve reinforced hawkish comments on the inflation outlook, risk assets sold off across the board, and crypto is still reeling from the aftermath.

A fairly nonvolatile weekend did little to improve the mood, and BTC price action has returned to focus on areas below $20,000.

In so doing, multiple weeks of upside have effectively disappeared, and in turn, traders and analysts expect a retest of the macro lows seen in June this year.

While all is now quiet regarding the Fed until the September rate hike decision, there is still plenty of room for upset as geopolitical uncertainty and inflation persist, the latter still increasing in Europe.

However, as last week, Bitcoin appears fundamentally resilient as a network, with on-chain data telling a different story to price charts.

Cointelegraph takes a look at five factors to consider when wondering where BTC/USD may head in the coming days.

Spot price triggers $18,000 target

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView confirms no surprises for guessing what happened to BTC/USD into the latest weekly close.

After a comparatively uneventful weekend trading period, the pair sold off considerably at the end of Aug. 28, resulting in the lowest weekly close since early July.

A $2,000 red weekly candle thus sealed a miserable August for bulls, this following an initial $3,000 of losses the week prior.

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

With days until the monthly candle completes, the mood among analysts was understandably less than optimistic in the short term.

“Hoping we can see a recovery this week but the way equities closed Friday doesn't look so hot,” trader Josh Rager summarized to Twitter followers in part of a weekend update.

Popular trading account Il Capo of Crypto nonetheless eyed the possibility for a brief squeeze to the upside before continuation of the downtrend.

Noting negative funding rates implying derivatives market bias towards straight losses, he predicted that $23,000 could reappear first.

“Much more people expecting 19k than those expecting 23k. Funding says it all. Also, there's a lot of juicy liquidity above 21k. Squeeze those shorts,” he tweeted.

Responding, trader Mark Cullen noted that traders were “adding more BTC shorts in the area between 20.1 and 20.3k.”

“There is a nice inefficiency above there and another at around 20.9-21.1k. If it can break up it's likely to be a fast move higher,” he added.

Amid various calls for $17,000 or lower, technical analyst Gert van Lagen gave a $17,500 floor target for the daily chart.

In a slightly less cautious outlook, TMV Crypto meanwhile flagged $18,400 as a high-timeframe area of interest.

Traders prepare for further U.S. stocks declines

Last week’s bombshell of a speech by Fed Chair Jerome Powell sent shockwaves through risk assets worldwide.

According to one tally, Powell’s eight-minute address wiped over $2 trillion from global stocks, including $1.25 trillion in the U.S. alone.

“At some point, as the stance of monetary policy tightens further, it likely will become appropriate to slow the pace of increases,” Powell said.

“Restoring price stability will likely require maintaining a restrictive policy stance for some time. The historical record cautions strongly against prematurely loosening policy.”

Bitcoin and altcoins alike felt the squeeze, with Aug. 29 set to be something of a make or break Wall Street trading session.

Speaking on Bloomberg Television, Paul Christopher, head of global market strategy at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, warned that U.S. stocks would fall further, with the S&P 500 due for a trip below 4,000 next.

On the flipside, crypto-focused Game of Trades argued that peak inflation from July had already signaled a macro low in stocks.

Flagging cumulative data for the S&P, Game of Trades continued to argue that all was in fact not as bad as it seemed.

“SP500 is showing A LOT of underlying strength,” accompanying comments from the weekend read.

“The cumulative advance/decline line speaks to the underlying strength in the market, which many investors are failing to notice. Despite the SP500 being double digits away from the ATH, the indicator has entered new highs.”

Even a drop to 3,900, another insight stated, would preserve a “bullish formation.”

U.S. dollar targets September 2002 levels

A key accompaniment to upheaval in equities remains the strength of the U.S. dollar this week.

A classic inversely correlated relationship, dollar performance versus risk assets is in the spotlight thanks to the U.S. dollar index (DXY) making new twenty-year highs this week.

At the time of writing on Aug. 29, those highs are still playing out, DXY having hit 109.47 in its highest spike since September 2002.

U.S. dollar index (DXY) 1-hour candle chart. Source: TradingView

“If the dollar keeps going, it's going to really break things. It has literally done parabolic,” Raoul Pal, founder of Global Macro Investor, responded, warning that there was “literally nothing until 120” in terms of resistance on the DXY chart.

Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe was equally alarmed, including DXY as a factor creating a “moment of truth for the entire crypto market.”

The dollar’s surge likewise spelled pain for major fiat currencies, notably the euro, which swiftly headed back below parity with the greenback into Aug. 29.

The European Central Bank, along with the Bank of Japan, has been reluctant to instigate the same bill of rate hikes as the Fed, leading to inflation continuing to climb over the summer.

EUR/USD 1-hour candle chart. Source: TradingView

MVRV-Z score retreats into the green

Heading back into its “buy” zone is a classic Bitcoin strength indicator which has caught macro bottoms throughout Bitcoin’s lifespan.

The MVRV-Z score indicator, which began to prepare analysts for a price bottom in July, is now falling again, hitting its lowest in a month.

Bitcoin MVRV-Z score chart. Source: LookIntoBitcoin

MVRV-Z uses market cap and realized price to determine how close BTC/USD is to its “fair value.”

In July, it printed a potential BTC price floor of $15,600, while briefly exiting its buy zone before returning during the second half of August.

As Cointelegraph reported, realized price — the average at which the BTC supply last moved — now sits at around $21,600, data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode confirms.

Bitcoin realized price chart. Source: Glassnode

"Extreme fear" makes a comeback

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Bitcoin heading back below $20,000 has caused its key market sentiment gauge to return to its most bearish category.

Related: Bitcoin mining difficulty set for 8-month record gains despite BTC price dip

As of Aug. 29, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index is back in “extreme fear” territory at 24/100.

Having reached as high as 47/100 during the relief rally, the Index now resides in the bracket which has characterized several months of 2022.

This year even saw its longest-ever spell in “extreme fear,” along with lows of just 6/100 as an overall market sentiment score.

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

Analyzing the mood across investors, however, on-chain research firm Santiment noted that large-volume investors were adding to their holdings rather than divesting.

“As Bitcoin has danced around $20,000 this weekend, a positive sign is the growth in the amount of key whale addresses,” it commented on a chart for August.

“There's a correlation between $BTC's price & the amount of addresses holding 100 to 10k $BTC, and they're up 103 in the past 30 days.”

Nonetheless, others felt that there was still some way to go before a genuine macro turning point was reached in crypto demand.

“The true generational entry is not just when people are afraid to buy, but when they're too broke to buy,” on-chain analytics firm Material Indicators acknowledged.

“Not there yet.”
Bitcoin whale address growth annotated chart. Source: Santiment/ 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.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

US stocks lose $1.25T in a day — more than entire crypto market cap

Risk assets take a major blow as Fed Chair Jerome Powell stays firmly hawkish on inflation and monetary policy.

Bitcoin (BTC) and altcoins lost big on Aug. 26 after the United States Federal Reserve delivered hawkish remarks on economic policy.

Across the board, risk assets took a major hit — U.S. equities shed around $1.25 trillion in a single session.

Analyst: Powell retiring "soft landing" rhetoric

As comments by Fed Chair, Jerome Powell, suggested that larger rate hikes were still firmly on the table despite recent data hinting that inflation was already slowing, investors rushed to cut risk.

"Restoring price stability will likely require maintaining a restrictive policy stance for some time. The historical record cautions strongly against prematurely loosening policy," Powell said at the annual Jackson Hole economic symposium.

The S&P 500 closed down 3.4% on the day, hitting its lowest levels since late July. The Nasdaq Composite Index copied the move and extended losses, shedding 4%.

Overall, the U.S. stock market lost more value than the entire market cap of Bitcoin and altcoins combined.

The total crypto market cap itself fell from $1.029 trillion to $936.87 billion at one point overnight, representing a drop of 8.95%, according to data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView.

Total crypto market cap 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

While some argued that Powell's words were not the essential area to consider in terms of future Fed policy, others noted that previous narratives were slowly being abandoned when it came to the inflation outlook.

Holger Zschaepitz, popular markets commentator for German media publication Die Welt, considered the speech to have hit "all the hawkish notes" with Powell "skipping the dovish ones."

"The hawkish features were his acknowledgment of the pain that is likely needed to reduce inflation – no more soft landing, the indication that rates will need to be taken above neutral," he added in part of Twitter comments.

Powell also said that the decision over how far to extend key interest rates in September would "depend on the totality of the incoming data and the evolving outlook."

The latest readings from CME Group's FedWatch Tool meanwhile showed majority consensus favoring a 75-basis-point hike in September, echoing the July move.

Fed target rate probabilities chart. Source: CME Group

No hodler can hide the pain

For crypto investors, however, there was no avoiding the immediate impact of the risk asset rout.

Related: Price analysis 8/26: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, ADA, SOL, DOGE, DOT, SHIB, MATIC

BTC/USD lost up to 8.8% at one point, dipping under the $20,000 mark for the first time since July 14 before recovering to linger just above the significant line in the sand.

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

For altcoins, the picture was no less dire. Ether (ETH), the largest altcoin by market cap, saw intraday losses approaching 14%.

ETH/USD circled $1,500 at the time of writing on Aug. 27, wiping out an entire month's gains. Among price takes was a fresh warning from popular trader Crypto Ed, who eyed a possible further leg down next.

"Could drop to $1200-1300 before any bounce of significance," part of his latest Twitter update read.

ETH/USD 1-day candle chart (Binance). Source: TradingView

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.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

Wen moon? Probably not soon: Why Bitcoin traders should make friends with the trend

Recurring bear flags and the Fed’s telegraphed monetary policy are painting a roadmap for BTC’s future price action.

The impact of Federal Reserve policy and Bitcoin’s higher timeframe market structure suggest that BTC price is not yet ready for a trend reversal. 

Bitcoin (BTC) price continues to chop below the $22,000 level and the wider narrative among traders and the mainstream media suggests that a risk-off sentiment is a dominant perspective ahead of this week’s Jackson Hole summit.

Over the three-day symposium, the Federal Reserve is expected to clarify its perspective on inflation, interest rate hikes and the overall health of the United States economy.

In the meantime, traders on Crypto Twitter continue to fantisize about a “Fed pivot” where interest hikes will be curtailed below 0.25 basis points and some form of monetary easing re-emerges, but the likelihood of the Fed adopting a dovish point-of-view in the short-term seems unrealistic, given the central bank’s 2% inflation target.

Regarding Bitcoin’s most recent price action, an old saying among traders is:

“Fade the short-term trend in favor of the long-term trend.”

From a bird’s-eye-view, BTC price is in a clear downtrend with a four-month long stretch of recurring bear flags that continue to see continuation.

Sure, the on-chain data hints that maybe price is at a bottom.

Of course, aggregate volumes and certain on-chain data looking at whale and shrimp BTC addresses may point toward accumulation.

Yeah, the open interest in BTC and Ether continues to reach record highs and this adds fuel to the bullish ETH Merge and ETH proof-of-work hard fork tokens narrative triggering a juicy short squeeze on BTC and ETH.

Any of those things can happen, but beware the narrator of those hopium-infused dreams and remember that the trend is always a good friend that a trader can lean on.

As unpleasant as it might sound, the trend is down. Bitcoin continues to meet resistance at its long-term descending trendline and the price has failed to secure resistance at key moving averages like the 20, 50 and 200-day MA.

BTC/USDT daily chart. Source: Tradingview

Each price drop is simply creating a flag-pole, and the ensuing “consolidation” creates the flag of the bear flag continuation pattern. As the pink boxes on the daily chart shows, BTC price simply trades within a defined range before breaking below it into underlying liquidity shown by the volume profile visible range and liquidity maps.

Essentially, there’s “nothing to see here” until price paints a few daily candles that reflect higher highs, i.e., BTC needs to clear $25,000 and close that volume profile gap in the $25,000 to $29,000 zone.

From there, one would either want to see consolidation within that new higher range, or continuation of a trend reversal where the 20-MA and 50-MA function as support. As mentioned earlier, of course there are a ton of other data points that make a strong case for why the current price range is a buy zone, but what may be true for one trader is not necessarily the case for all.

Some investors can afford to open swing longs here and lower and ride it out because they are flush and that’s part of their plan. Others have a smaller purse and can’t afford the lost opportunity cost of being locked into a red position for months on end. Traders are always encouraged to do their own research, make their own thesis and manage risk in a way that is best for their situation.

Jackson Hole is coming up and the Fed needs to continue rate hikes until inflation and other metrics are under control. Equities markets remain tightly correlated with Bitcoin price, so the tell will be whether or not SPX and DJI continue to steamroll higher, or if future actions from the Federal Reserve begin to put a damper on the recent bullish momentum.

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.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

Crypto ATM firm Bitcoin Depot aims to go public in 2023 via $885M SPAC deal

One of the largest crypto ATM providers in North America, Bitcoin Depot, plans to list its stock on Nasdaq in the first quarter of 2023.

Bitcoin Depot, a major cryptocurrency ATM provider in the United States, is planning to go public through a merger with a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC).

Atlanta-based Bitcoin Depot has reached a definitive agreement to merge with the SPAC GSR II Meteora (GSRM) in an $885 million deal in order to go public, the firm officially announced on Thursday.

The business combination would result in Bitcoin Depot becoming a publicly listed company as the combined company — to be dubbed Bitcoin Depot Inc. — will trade on the Nasdaq under the new ticker symbol BTM.

The merger has been unanimously approved by the leadership team of Bitcoin Depot and the board of directors of GSRM and is expected to close by the first quarter of 2023. The business combination is subject to regulatory and stakeholder approvals, and other customary closing conditions.

The GSR II Meteora SPAC reportedly has about $320 million that Bitcoin Depot could use to grow, though SPAC investors are able to withdraw their money before the merger is done. Bitcoin Depot could proceed with a funding round that would close at the same time as the merger deal.

Gus Garcia, GSRM co-CEO and a former SPAC banker at Bank of America, said he is confident in Bitcoin Depot’s financing options because of the company’s steady growth. 

“With its significant BTM footprint, key strategic relationships, and feature-rich mobile app, we believe Bitcoin Depot is well positioned to take advantage of the highly fragmented BTM market both domestically and overseas,” he noted.

Related: Galaxy Digital terminates BitGo acquisition, citing breach of contract

Founded in 2016, Bitcoin Depot is one of the largest crypto ATM providers in North America, operating over 7,000 kiosk locations. According to CEO Brandon Mintz, the company has continued growing despite the ongoing cryptocurrency bear market, which highlights a growing number of use cases for crypto-like payments and transferring money globally.

“We’re actually doing fantastic right now regardless of the market,” he said. Mintz also noted Bitcoin Depot plans to pursue acquisitions after going public.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

China’s Ant Group to help Malaysia launch crypto-friendly ‘super app’

Expected to launch in early 2023, Kenanga’s crypto-friendly super app will feature digital investment management, e-wallet, FX, stock trading and other services.

Malaysia continues accelerating its pace of cryptocurrency adoption as one of the major local banks is moving into cryptocurrency trading as part of its default banking offerings.

Kenanga Investment Bank Berhad, one of the largest private investment banks with more than 500,000 customers, has partnered with China’s tech giant Ant Group to launch a crypto-friendly wallet and trading app.

According to an announcement on Wednesday, Kenanga has signed a memorandum of understanding with Ant to jointly develop Malaysia’s wealth application called categorized as a super app. Under the terms of the agreement, Ant’s digital technology unit will provide Kenanga with mPaaS, a mobile development platform originating from AliPay App.

“Adopted by many businesses to build new apps and optimize the performance of existing apps, our financial-grade mPaaS mobile development platform is well-positioned to support Kenanga in integrating a wide range of products and services into its SuperApp,” At’s digital tech president Geoff Jiang noted.

The SuperApp is designed to revolutionize the way of managing wealth in Malaysia by integrating diverse financial services — like stock trading, digital investment management, crypto trading, digital wallet, foreign currency exchange and others — into a single platform. Kenanga reportedly plans to launch the app in early 2023.

“We look forward to not only unifying a broad spectrum of financial offerings under one roof, but more importantly, to make wealth creation more accessible by democratizing financial services for the millions of Malaysians,” Kenanga Group managing director Datuk Chay Wai Leong said.

He also mentioned that Kenanga started experimenting with digital financial services five years ago, and the new application would bring the company’s growth to the next level. As previously reported, Kenanga has been an active player in the crypto industry, investing in local crypto exchange operators like Tokenize Technology in 2021.

Related: Malaysian regulators add Huobi to investor alert list

Kenanga is also a known partner of the Japanese crypto-friendly retail firm Rakuten, providing Malaysia’s local online stock trading platform Rakuten Trade.

The cryptocurrency industry has seen some action in Malaysia in recent months, with local officials reportedly calling the government to legalize crypto in March 2022. While crypto investment and trading have been legal in Malaysia, the government opposed the idea of adopting crypto as legal tender.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

A bullish Bitcoin trend reversal is a far-fetched idea, but this metric is screaming ‘buy’

Non crypto-related factors continue to weigh on BTC price, but a key on-chain metric that called previous market bottoms suggests Bitcoin is severely undervalued.

Bitcoin (BTC) price remains pinned below $22,000 as the lingering impact of the Aug. 19 sell-off at $25,200 continues to be felt across the market. 

According to analysts from on-chain monitoring resource Glassnode, BTC’s tap at the $25,000 level was followed by “distribution” as profit-takers and short-term holders sold as price encountered a trendline resistance following a 23 consecutive day uptrend that saw BTC trading above it’s realized price ($21,700).

Bitcoin total inflows and outflows to all exchanges (USD). Source: glassnode

The firm also noted that the “total inflows and outflows to all exchanges” metric shows exchange flows at multi-year lows and back to “late-2020 levels,” which reflects a “general lack of speculative interest.”

From a higher-time frame perspective, Bitcoin’s current price action is simply a continuation of its near three-month-long chop in the $18,500 to $22,000 range, but the real damper on sentiment is persistent non-crypto-related concerns in the United States and global economy.

On August 25, the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium begins and from this the public will learn more about the Federal Reserve’s perspective on the U.S. economy, its plans for future interest rate hikes, whether or not the inflation target remains at 2% and if the Fed thinks the U.S and global economy are in recession. Anticipation over the symposium has clearly made investors skittish and these frayed nerves are visible in the S&P 500, DJI and crypto markets this week.

According to Serhii Zhdanov, CEO of EXMO cryptocurrency exchange:

“It appears there is no single driver for the recent decline. The global crises continue, and it is not certain where the bottom is. Inflation is forcing people to get rid of their investments to get cash to cover daily expenses. In many countries the total amount of credit card debt is breaking to new record highs. Recent data shows that Covid isn’t gone and geopolitical tension further adds fuel to global markets’ decline.”

Ether marches to the beat of its own drum

Ether (ETH), on the other hand, appears to be showing some upside promise from a technical analysis point-of-view. Last week, the asset corrected alongside BTC and endured a few blows related to centralization fears after the OFAC sanctioned Tornado Cash and the crypto community grew fearful over potential outcomes of the proof-of-stake transition making the network (and its largest ETH stakers) susceptible to censorship and regulation.

ETH/USDT daily chart. Source: TradingView

Generally, the bullish “merge” narrative remains in play and the large cup and handle pattern seen on Ether’s daily timeframe, plus the bounce off the $1,500 level are enough to support traders’ dreams of ETH price rising into the $2,500 to $2,900 range.

Ether looks similarly juicy in its ETH/BTC pair which bounced off support in the 0.073 BTC range.

MVRV on-chain data points to undervalued Bitcoin

As @big_smokey1 mentioned “stocks and crypto [are] clearly risk off” with Jackson Hole upcoming and in terms of price action, this is likely to manifest as continued resistance at Bitcoin’s long-term descending trendline until a sufficient catalyst to provoke a trend change emerges.

Related: What crashed the crypto relief rally? Find out now on The Market Report

For the time being, Bitcoin’s short-term price prospects are less than optimistic, but Jarvis Labs resident analyst “JJ” pinpointed a key on-chain metric which suggests BTC is trading in a generational buy zone.

Price versus MVRV difference for BTC. Source: Jarvis Labs

According to JJ, Bitcoin’s MVRV (Market Capitalization versus Realized Capitalization) indicator is printing a reading that is “extremely low.”

Does this mean that investors should go out and put every last penny into BTC? Probably not, but as the MVRV chart above shows, dollar cost averaging into BTC when its on-chain and technical metrics hit extreme lows has proven to be a profitable strategy in the last three bull markets.

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.

Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4

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Analyst Says Bitcoin To Keep Outperforming Altcoins, Unveils ‘Big Level’ BTC Needs To Overcome for a Bullish Q4