The following is a contributed article from a content partner of Benzinga
The general trading direction of bitcoin has been mixed through 2020. The largest cryptocurrency by market cap started the year in a rally from a December low of a little under $6,900 and, by February, it had crested the $10,000 level. Then the pandemic set in and sent prices throughout the investment world into a frenzy, pushing the price of bitcoin to a 200-day low.
Nevertheless, bitcoin rebounded and now sits with about 36.16% in gains year-to-date, hovering at that same 10,000 its seen several times now in the past 12 months. Those who trade bitcoin have no doubt observed that the price of the cryptocurrency has struggled to maintain its value past psychological resistance at the $10,000 price point. Over the last four weeks, bitcoin has been finding support around $8,600 but has failed to break out convincingly above the resistance at $10,000.
The bitcoin halving event that happened last month was a big deal, and in the weeks leading up to the halving, there were many predictions about how the halving will send the price of bitcoin to the moon. However, the halving has happened, and bitcoin is still finding it hard to build the momentum for a post-halving rally.
This piece explores why bitcoin seems to be stuck in a range and how a breakout above $10,000 might be the lynchpin to the explosion of a post-halving boom.
The $10,000 Level: Breakout Or Breakdown?
On Monday, June 2, bitcoin recorded a sudden surge that pushed its price above $10,000 - a move that emboldened the bulls while simultaneously squeezing short-sellers.
However, the rally peaked around $10,428 and the trading price slumped by 8% in less than 5 minutes to return bitcoin back to the $9,500 range. It appears that one of the reasons bitcoin can’t seem to make up its mind for a post-halving rally is the effect of the price action in the fight for market dominance between retail traders of bitcoin and those with the capital to make bigger wagers on the cryptocurrency: whales and professional traders.
The chart above superimposes the support and resistance range on the trading price of bitcoin over the past 30 days. From the chart, bitcoin currently has solid support around $9400, the support at $9,200 is thin, and $9000 is not off the table. There’s significant resistance at $10,200, but a breakout above $10,400 could leave the bears in the dust.
One the one hand, the bitcoin whales and professional traders seem to be shorting into $10,000, and on the other hand, retail investors seem to be under-allocating funds above $10,000. The counterbalancing effect of the market dynamics of buy- and sell-sides of $10,000 appear to be the main reason bitcoin is stuck in a range.
The short-term fate of bitcoin seems to be dependent on which of the two camps is able to exert the strongest market-making pressure that will force the other side to give up. If the sell-side pressure continues to rise, FUD might kick in and the price of bitcoin might retest previous lows.
A Surge In Retail Interest In Bitcoin
It is still somewhat hard to draw correlations between bitcoin and other traditional assets because the crypto market is still largely speculative. Nonetheless, large traditional indexes such as the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index have historically shown a significant impact on the price of bitcoin.
The chart below shows how bitcoin has fared relative to the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index, which tracks the value of the USD relative to a basket of four other currencies. Year-to-date, bitcoin has rebounded from the lows it set in March to chalk up a 36.16% gain in 2020. Meanwhile, the USD gave up some of the strength it received during the depths of the pandemic for a YTD gain just 0.28% and the S&P 500 has been able to rebound close to retaking positive territory at -0.89% in losses on the year.
The uncertainties that remain surrounding the global equity markets, like the fact that people are staying at home amidst the COVID-19 lockdown and growing civil unrest across the globe could suggest that retail investment in bitcoin will continue to increase as more investors explore alternative safety investments, even in the historically volatile cryptocurrency market.
If enough retail investors pile into bitcoin and they manage to push the price above $10,400, it could spell doom for whales and professional traders who have margin exposure; thereby, forcing them to start covering their trades. The move could in turn trigger a short-squeeze for cryptocurrencies and turn the expectations of a post-halving rally into a self-fulfilling prophecy.
What Crypto Analysts Think
The June edition of Bloomberg Crypto Outlook suggests that bitcoin will find support at $10,000 and that there’s a decent chance that it will retest the 2017 highs of $19,000 or even extend the rally up to $28,000.
The analysts further note that technical indicators point to a consolidating bitcoin bull setup as it continues to gain upward companionship with gold. They expressed that the “unprecedented year of central-bank easing is accelerating the maturation of the first-born crypto toward a digital version of gold while accentuating oversupply constraints in most of the market.”
Also, the COVID-19 pandemic as well as socio-economic unrest around the world could be hastening the maturity of bitcoin has an asset with an inverse relationship to equities and fiat currencies. Irrespective of what traditional economists think, COVID-19 has uncovered new dimensions in risk analysis that takes into account the possibility of unforeseen global turmoil as a result of mounting environmental, social and civil challenges that already characterize the 21st century juts 20 years in. The fact that a virus could cripple the global economy in modern times was something unthinkable until it happened. That alone is causing people to rethink the concept of money and the real degree of control governments have over those finances.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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