Autor Cointelegraph By William Suberg

Bitcoin steadies as gold hits $2K, US dollar strongest since May 2020

Bitcoin (BTC) stayed near one-week lows on March 7 as a flight to safety among investors did crypto markets no favors.BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingViewGold, dollar spell sour times for stocksData from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD bouncing at around $37,600 overnight before tracking around $1,000 higher.The pair had faced pressure into the weekly close, resulting in its lowest levels this month amid reports that Western sanctions against Russia could expand to include an oil embargo.An already panicky atmosphere thus fueled performance by safe haven gold, which returned to $2,000 per ounce for the first time since August 2020 Monday.XAU/USD 1-week candle chart. Source: TradingViewComing in step was the U.S. dollar, which surged against its peers to see the U.S. dollar currency index (DXY) target 100 in a near two-year record.Other major world currencies, such as the euro, paid the price, with EUR/USD falling below $1.09 to hit lows similarly not seen since the aftermath of the March 2020 Covid crash. U.S. dollar currency index (DXY) 1-week candle chart. Source: TradingView”If Bitcoin was uncorrelated from the Stock Market it would be performing the way Gold has performed since December,” analyst Matthew Hyland argued in a synopsis Sunday. “Bitcoin is correlated to the Stock Market. It has not ‘decoupled.’ Perhaps one day it does decouple but until it happens, you can’t conclude it has or will.”Such a “decoupling” was arguably more needed than at any time recently as stocks themselves faced a potential mixture of skyrocketing commodity prices and inflation-taming measures from governments.Prior to the Wall Street open, S&P 500 futures were knocking on 2% declines, while Germany’s DAX was already down nearly 4%.Ex-Goldman CEO Blankfein: Crypto should be “having a moment”The extent of Bitcoin’s lackluster performance meanwhile even caught the attention of the traditional finance world.Related: Rate hikes, CPI and war in Europe — 5 things to watch in Bitcoin this weekLloyd Blankfein, former CEO of Goldman Sachs, queried why crypto more broadly was not seeing larger inflows against a background of government control over money.”Keeping an open mind about crypto, but given the inflating US dollar and the stark reminder that governments can and will under certain circumstances freeze accounts and block payments, wouldn’t you think crypto would be having a moment now? Not seeing it in the price, so far,” he tweeted Monday.Responding, MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor blamed conflicting investment profiles active in Bitcoin specifically, but forecast that the status quo would ultimately be broken and would allow it to fulfill its function as a long-term investment. “There is a tension between conventional traders that see bitcoin as something to buy or sell depending upon their current risk assessment & interest rate expectations, and fundamental investors that simply want to buy it all and hold forever,” he wrote. “Over time, the HODLers will win.”

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Rate hikes, CPI and war in Europe — 5 things to watch in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week in the shadow of a deepening geopolitical nightmare unfolding around Russia.As retaliations for the Ukraine invasion grow, and the macroeconomic consequences grow with them, crypto by and large is struggling to keep up.A curious paradox has presented itself this month: despite investors and those directly impacted by the war assumedly looking for a safe haven, that safe haven has broadly not been Bitcoin or even stablecoins.Instead, stocks, which have taken a hit thanks to sanctions and their consequences, now form a major guide for how BTC/USD performs.As such, the trend for Bitcoin remains down, all within the same familiar macro range, which has characterized all of 2022.What could switch things up? Cointelegraph takes a look at a handful of factors worth keeping an eye on as the unprecedented European conflict plays out.Macro forces signal volatile, “rough” week aheadHistorical precedent aside, it has become clear that the stock market does not “like” the current European hostilities.Losses mounted last week, with global equities in total shedding $2.9 trillion of value. Add to that a warning that indices still seem “expensive” for the current environment and the midterm picture starts to look decidedly unappetizing.It is not just what has already taken place which is rocking the boat — new sanctions against Russia are on the table, among them some serious issues which would only be felt on longer timeframes should they come to fruition.Among them is a ban on Russian oil imports, a move set to upend the global status quo and trigger a seismic shift in how the economy fuels itself.“If this happened. I would think there’d be a high probability of stocks limiting down immediately off the news,” popular trader and analyst Pentoshi reacted to news of the idea, which hit over the weekend.Pentoshi had already sounded the alarm for stocks going forward, raising the concept of a Wall Street Crash type event triggering a modern-day counterpart of the Great Depression.While an extreme scenario, there is nonetheless precious little to be bullish about while the conflict remains unresolved and the fallout worsens.For Mike McGlone, chief commodity strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, Bitcoin’s intraday performance meant that the coming week should indeed be “rough” for risk assets.#Bitcoin May Revisit $30,000, But What of the #stockmarket? Down about 2% on Sunday morning 8am EST from Friday’s close, Bitcoin is indicating another rough week for risk assets – pic.twitter.com/FEj7hLQ08j— Mike McGlone (@mikemcglone11) March 6, 2022Comparing BTC/USD to the Nasdaq in particular this year, however, McGlone was not of the opinion that the only way is down.“Bitcoin faces deflationary forces after 2021 excesses, but the crypto shows divergent strength,” part of Twitter comments read Friday. “With 2002 losses less than half those for the Nasdaq 100, Bitcoin may be maturing toward global digital collateral.”CME gap sets up $40,000 rematchShould that be the case, Bitcoin hodlers are in for a choppy ride in the coming days.Sensitive stocks combined with rocketing commodities prices — an atmosphere of stagflation in the making, some say — hardly provides fertile ground for bullish sentiment.Overnight on Sunday, BTC/USD wicked down to $37,592 on Bitstamp, marking its lowest levels since late February and wholly erasing its subsequent gains.Even more frustrating is that the entire move was a repeat of a previous one, cementing the current price range as more definitive support and resistance.A look at the daily chart from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows just how persistent the range has been — and that in order to exit it, a breakout above the yearly open at $46,200 is needed.BTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingViewFor trader Matthew Hyland, however, the immediate picture suggests that such a move is unlikely.“Bitcoin has fallen below the crucial support zone,” he warned on Monday, showing the various price levels he argues figure as support and resistance in the range.#Bitcoin has fallen below the crucial support zone: pic.twitter.com/nmBTby77um— Matthew Hyland (@MatthewHyland_) March 7, 2022

The latest of those to go — around $39,600 — happens to coincide with Friday’s closing price on CME Group’s Bitcoin futures market.Given Bitcoin’s propensity to return to Friday close levels the following week, the area just below $40,000 could thus form a focus on Monday — and lay the foundations for a support/resistance flip should bulls gain momentum.“Great choppy movements of Bitcoin, but in the end it will come back to the price of the CME close of Friday evening,” Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe summarized.In a subsequent tweet, Van de Poppe joined McGlone in predicting a “volatile” week ahead.Traders brace for CPI, rate hike double whammyWhere would the current narrative be without the topic of inflation?What began as a “temporary” phenomenon has mushroomed into a cornerstone feature of the economic landscape this year — something many crypto industry participants predicted in advance.The Federal Reserve is now stuck with it, and has been criticized for failing to act quickly enough.Thus, despite the Russia fallout, lawmakers are eyeing a rate hike this month, and a decision will come on March 16. Prior to that, tension for Bitcoin may increase, as last-minute bets keep traders guessing on the outcome for risk assets.Mr. Market is saying no to a 50bps rate hike in March and yes to a 25bps hike – that means that the risks headed into this month’s Fed meeting are (imo):A) No hike = #BTC to $50k ++B) 50bps hike = Bitcoin to mid 30ksC) 25bps hike = Bitcoin continues to slowly trend higher pic.twitter.com/IA1EjlV5lJ— tedtalksmacro (@tedtalksmacro) March 1, 2022

Should a 25 basis point hike be enough to maintain the status quo for Bitcoin, it may already have come too late.Prior to the Fed announcement, the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for the U.S. is due to hit — and any major deviations from the forecast could upend the delicate balance.Already at 40-year highs, CPI became infamous last month as Bitcoin put in multiple “fakeout” moves in the hours after the monthly numbers were released.Extreme, but not extreme enough?A familiar face shows just how big a hit crypto sentiment has taken in recent days.As BTC/USD fell from the top of its range, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index fell with it — right back into the “extreme fear” zone.The bullishness in early March is clearly visible on the Index, which more than doubled its normalized sentiment score to reach 51/100 before proceeding to lose it all again and reach just 22/100.Crypto Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: Alternative.meFear & Greed uses a basket of factors to depict the mood, and currently suggests that there is room for further deterioration — local market bottoms tend to be accompanied by a score of around 10/100.“It’s a short visioned market, meaning that the horizon is maybe a few days, and sentiment switches,” Van de Poppe added about the current setup.In a jibe at weak hands, meanwhile, popular trader Crypto Daan argued that even a collapse to $20,000 would not constitute a major trend violation on long enough timeframes for Bitcoin.“A backtest to 20k, technically wouldn’t be bad at all. Not nice for sentiment, but technically nice back test,” he tweeted Sunday.Reserve Risk enters the greenHow on edge are hodlers really?Related: Top 5 cryptocurrencies to watch this week: BTC, XRP, NEAR, XMR, WAVESAs ever, there is a clear line to be drawn between long-term and short-term BTC investors, with the former still stubbornly riding out the comedown from all-time highs.One key metric supporting the view that confidence in Bitcoin does not match the price is Reserve Risk.Created in 2019, Reserve Risk pits sentiment against price in a way that shows when to invest in order to have a good chance of producing what on-chain analytics site LookIntoBitcoin calls “outsized” returns.Currently, BTC/USD is heading back into the green “buy” zone, indicating that conditions favor long-term investors once more — high confidence and low price.“It is now entering value btfd territory on macro timeframes as price trends down,” LookIntoBitcoin creator Philip Swift commented on the “very useful” Reserve Risk data.Bitcoin Reserve Risk chart. Source: LookIntoBitcoin

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Bitcoin heading to 36K, analysis says amid warning global stocks 'look expensive'

Bitcoin (BTC) headed lower into the weekly close on March 6 with geopolitical tensions and associated macro weakness firmly in focus.BTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingViewCould 2022 bring a “Greater Depression”?Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD hitting its lowest levels in over a week Sunday after volatility returned overnight.The pair was in the process of testing $38,000 support at the time of writing, with three-day losses approaching 12%.Despite the “out of hours” trading environment, the trend was clearly down for the largest cryptocurrency, as the mood on global equities wobbled among analysts.”Global equities have lost $2.9tn in mkt cap this week as war could trigger major stagflationary shock,” markets commentator Holger Zschaepitz warned on the day. “Economists cut their growth forecasts & raise inflation projections. Global stock mkts now worth $110tn, equal to 130% of global GDP, which looks expensive for current situation.”Should a bigger TradFi correction set in, an already shaky crypto market could fare just as badly, some argue — at least to begin with.Popular trader and analyst Pentoshi even went as far as to forecast a repeat of the worldwide meltdown, which triggered the Great Depression 90 years ago.The most exciting thing this year. Will be global markets collapsing. Any market that trades above 0 will be too high. They will call this. “The greater depression” which will be 10x worse than the Great Depression. Goodnight https://t.co/v1JUsy1eyA— Pentoshi (@Pentosh1) March 6, 2022Some established pundits, however, held a decidedly different stance. In its latest crypto market outlook report on March 4, Bloomberg Intelligence remained bullish on Bitcoin and Ether (ETH). “Most assets are subject to the ebbing tide in 2022, on the inevitable reversion of the highest inflation in four decades, but this year may mark another milestone for Bitcoin,” it read. “If risk assets don’t decline and reduce some of the price pressure, inflation measures are more likely to remain buoyant, leaving few options for central banks but to raise rates more aggressively.”$36,000 support may step in for BTCWith trepidation still ruling the roost short term, the outlook for Bitcoin held few bullish cues, focusing on a continuation of the current trading range. Related: Bitcoin loses $40K as BTC price support levels give way to 1-week lows”Bitcoin is at a critical level,” Yann Allemann and Jan Happel, co-founders of on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, summarized while introducing the latest edition of its “Uncharted” newsletter. “RSI is oversold and trending up. If the price fails to break above $40k, we go down to support. Support: $34-$36k Resistance: $43-$45k.”BTC/USD chart with RSI. Source: Negentropic/ TwitterThe accompanying graphic showed just how historically good value BTC/USD was at current prices and the correlation between such RSI lows and price reversals.

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Bitcoin loses $40K as BTC price support levels give way to 1-week lows

Bitcoin (BTC) stayed below some critical support zones into the weekend after a late sell-off cost bulls the $40,000 mark.BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingViewUpper range support levels crumble for BTCData from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView painted a lackluster picture for BTC/USD Saturday, the pair lingering near $39,000 after seeing lows of $38,600.Traders had hoped that various price points above $40,000 would be sufficient to steady the market after its latest run to $45,200.In the event, however, bids failed to preserve the trend, sending Bitcoin back to the middle of a range in which it had acted throughout 2022.#Bitcoin is hanging onto the edge of a cliff the past few hours pic.twitter.com/dAD2AveTOi— Matthew Hyland (@MatthewHyland_) March 5, 2022In a market update released Friday, Filbfilb, co-founder of trading suite Decentrader, had highlighted $36,000 as a potential target for shorts should the area around $39,500 fail to hold — something which ultimately proved to be so. Bitcoin, he had said, was “still rangebound on a macro level,” but support was there as a “rising tide,” which looked apt to preserve long-term structures.Among these was the 200-week moving average (MA), now above $20,000 and rising, which should provide definitive support as macro markets experience something similar to the March 2020 Covid crash in terms of sentiment.”Systematic risk in the market is high and as a result, volatility should be expected and trade size and duration should be considered with this in mind,” Filbfilb advised.”Short-term panic”Also eyeing the macro environment was Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, who in an extended YouTube video discussed the impact of the Ukraine-Russia conflict and its knock-on effects worldwide.Related: Price analysis 3/4: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, LUNA, SOL, ADA, AVAX, DOT, DOGEDue to short-term flights to safety, he argued, gold and the U.S. dollar were profiting at Bitcoin’s expense, yet under the surface, adoption was taking place.”At this stage, we’re seeing that Bitcoin is dropping down significantly. Why is that? That’s because of short-term panic,” he said.In another nod to the events of March 2020, both Bitcoin and altcoins should be in for a renaissance as usage increases, Van de Poppe added, this beginning with Bitcoin before expanding into DeFi assets.Major altcoin tokens managed to avoid the extent of Bitcoin’s losses on daily timeframes, broadly keeping these under 5%.Ether (ETH) was down 3.1% in 24 hours at the time of writing at $2,650.ETH/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

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Bitcoin declines with US stocks as nuclear threat ripples through markets

Bitcoin (BTC) bulls saw no relief at the Wall Street open on March 4 as $40,000 support appeared on the horizon.BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingViewTrader: Markets “shaky,” but BTC could bounceData from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView revealed new March lows of $40,551 for BTC/USD on Bitstamp, taking two-day losses to 10.2%.Fears over the security of Ukraine’s nuclear infrastructure drove not just crypto but traditional markets lower on the day, with the S&P 500 following European indexes to decline by 1.4%.“Bitcoin correcting as tensions around Ukraine are increasing, and fear is increasing too as Gold is rushing upwards,” Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe explained in his latest Twitter update. “Might be seeing a bounce, if we do, I’m looking at $43.1-43.5K as a potential resistance point. Overall shaky markets, altcoins dropping too.”Looking ahead, meanwhile, a highly cautious Pentoshi warned that the macro outlook looked bleak thanks to a combination of commodity inflation, reduced ability of central banks to tame it, and the existing damage done by responses to the coronavirus over the past two years.“You can already see other markets starting to show massive cracks in the foundation, Hong Kong has erased 100% of the post covid gains, and it appears European markets are next,” he wrote in one of a series of tweets about the situation Thursday. “I’m not sure how anyone can look at the past, and be bullish on the present.”Oil remained a case in point this week, with WTI reaching its highest levels in the past decade and Brent hitting $112 a barrel. Russian oil conversely struggled to find buyers despite being offered at a steep discount.Price consolidation was “expected”When it came to Bitcoin, however, not everyone was bearish.Related: Bitcoin mining difficulty drops for the first time this yearAnalyzing recent chart movements, popular account BTCfuel spied a potential rebound already in the making.“Bitcoin looks like it’s setting up a reversal structure,” he commented alongside a chart showing two potential trajectories for BTC price action.#Bitcoin looks like it’s setting up a reversal structure After running into the 100D MA (red) there are 2 scenarios possible IMO. Staying between the MA’s and following the blue scenario or falling below the MA’s and following the orange scenario pic.twitter.com/f4XvqZWVA4— BTCfuel (@BTCfuel) March 4, 2022Others, including fellow Twitter account Kaleo, were equally unfazed.“Consolidating in the 40.5K – 42K range above support as expected. Still expecting a bounce from this range,” he wrote Friday.

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