Bitcoin Indicator that Crashed Price to $3.1K Returns: The Dreaded Death Cross
#crypto #bitcoin
Bitcoin is looking to repeat a technical pattern that crashed its price to $3,120 in late 2018. The leading cryptocurrency by valuation made a rebound from levels near $13,920 during June 2019. It plunged by more than 53 percent in the later sessions, falling to establish a local bottom towards $6,410. Entering January 2020, an upside recovery pushed bitcoin’s rate to a swing top of $9,190. $BTC bulls always have the last laugh https://t.co/it38weJaHz — The Crypto Dog (@TheCryptoDog) January 22, 2020 The latest move uphill improved the cryptocurrency’s interim bullish bias. Analysts predicted further gains, expecting that investors would consider bitcoin as a haven against gloomy macroeconomic sentiments, including the Federal Reserve’s injection of $500 billion into the repo market that could raise demand for hedging assets. Nevertheless, a dreaded technical indicator is giving an alarming view of the bitcoin market. It shows that the cryptocurrency’s recent gains are a part of a more prominent drop that may come later and crash the price to as low as $2,300. Death Cross in a Death Cycle So it appears, the bitcoin’s latest price cycle is strikingly similar to the one it formed upon establishing circa $20,000 as its all-time high. ‘Cycle 1’ in the chart below shows the price corrected wildly upon the top formation. It made lower highs on each move upward while maintaining the long-term selling outlook. As it did, bitcoin also formed a Death Cross when its long-term moving average (blacked) closed below its near-term moving average (blued). Bitcoin mirroring its bearish moves of 2018 in 2020 | Source: TradingView.com, BitMEX The cryptocurrency later struggled to move above the blued wave. And the more the price stayed below it, the higher the selling sentiment grew. Nine months after the formation of the Death Cross, the bitcoin-to-dollar exchange rate had totaled it plunge by 83.78 percent. ‘Cycle 2’ appears like a dwarfed version of ‘Cycle 1.’ Bitcoin is forming lower highs after forming a local top. Its move downward has remade the Death Cross. And, at last, the price is struggling to break above the blued wave – the long-term moving average – as is visible in bulls’ latest efforts. The two widely distanced yet identical cycles serves a warning sign: Bitcoin’s downtrend is far from over and its price could at least plunged by 83 percent. That would bring the bears’ downside target close to circa $2,300. Bitcoin’s Silver Lining Observing bitcoin on a larger timeframe, such as a weekly one, improves the cryptocurrency’s bullish scenario. As covered by NewsBTC earlier, the price has jumped above its 50-weekly MA (blacked), a bias-defining technical support/resistance. Bitcoin closed above 200-weekly SMA to confirm a long-term bullish bias | Source: TradingView.com, Coinbase Meanwhile, on the daily chart, defending the same 50-period support could reduce the possibility of a breakdown towards $2,300. The post appeared first on NewsBTC.
OhNoCrypto
via https://www.ohnocrypto.com
Yashu Gola, Khareem Sudlow
Bitcoin is looking to repeat a technical pattern that crashed its price to $3,120 in late 2018. The leading cryptocurrency by valuation made a rebound from levels near $13,920 during June 2019. It plunged by more than 53 percent in the later sessions, falling to establish a local bottom towards $6,410. Entering January 2020, an upside recovery pushed bitcoin’s rate to a swing top of $9,190. $BTC bulls always have the last laugh https://t.co/it38weJaHz — The Crypto Dog (@TheCryptoDog) January 22, 2020 The latest move uphill improved the cryptocurrency’s interim bullish bias. Analysts predicted further gains, expecting that investors would consider bitcoin as a haven against gloomy macroeconomic sentiments, including the Federal Reserve’s injection of $500 billion into the repo market that could raise demand for hedging assets. Nevertheless, a dreaded technical indicator is giving an alarming view of the bitcoin market. It shows that the cryptocurrency’s recent gains are a part of a more prominent drop that may come later and crash the price to as low as $2,300. Death Cross in a Death Cycle So it appears, the bitcoin’s latest price cycle is strikingly similar to the one it formed upon establishing circa $20,000 as its all-time high. ‘Cycle 1’ in the chart below shows the price corrected wildly upon the top formation. It made lower highs on each move upward while maintaining the long-term selling outlook. As it did, bitcoin also formed a Death Cross when its long-term moving average (blacked) closed below its near-term moving average (blued). Bitcoin mirroring its bearish moves of 2018 in 2020 | Source: TradingView.com, BitMEX The cryptocurrency later struggled to move above the blued wave. And the more the price stayed below it, the higher the selling sentiment grew. Nine months after the formation of the Death Cross, the bitcoin-to-dollar exchange rate had totaled it plunge by 83.78 percent. ‘Cycle 2’ appears like a dwarfed version of ‘Cycle 1.’ Bitcoin is forming lower highs after forming a local top. Its move downward has remade the Death Cross. And, at last, the price is struggling to break above the blued wave – the long-term moving average – as is visible in bulls’ latest efforts. The two widely distanced yet identical cycles serves a warning sign: Bitcoin’s downtrend is far from over and its price could at least plunged by 83 percent. That would bring the bears’ downside target close to circa $2,300. Bitcoin’s Silver Lining Observing bitcoin on a larger timeframe, such as a weekly one, improves the cryptocurrency’s bullish scenario. As covered by NewsBTC earlier, the price has jumped above its 50-weekly MA (blacked), a bias-defining technical support/resistance. Bitcoin closed above 200-weekly SMA to confirm a long-term bullish bias | Source: TradingView.com, Coinbase Meanwhile, on the daily chart, defending the same 50-period support could reduce the possibility of a breakdown towards $2,300. The post appeared first on NewsBTC.
OhNoCrypto
via https://www.ohnocrypto.com
Yashu Gola, Khareem Sudlow