Advertisement
Advertisement

Up and down: What is around the Corner for BTC Now?

By:
Alexander Kuptsikevich
Updated: May 17, 2019, 12:32 UTC

The inability to stay above $8K threshold resulted in a Bitcoin drop of $1,400 in just a few hours. Over 24 hours, first cryptocurrency lost more than 9% to $7,300, only partially recovering from a decline to $6,600.

Up and down: what is around the corner for BTC now?

Apparently, some players decided to quit Bitcoin, considering the rally to be exhausted. Market watchers noted that the decline was caused by a large, by several thousand Bitcoins, order for sale on Bitstamp. It also became a trigger for price correction for the main altcoins, most of which lose more than 10% against the levels of the previous day.

As for technical analysis, Bitcoin stumbled over the resistance level near $8,200, which in July last year also stopped the growth. The relative strength index RSI on the daily charts marks a divergence as new price highs are not confirmed by new index highs. Even more alarming, the RSI fell sharply in the region below 70, probably marking the beginning of a longer correction.

Interestingly, the sale occurred just the day after the 50-day average crossed the 200-day bottom-up. In technical analysis, this is considered a strong buy signal called Golden Cross. If the correction does not receive an impulse below $6,000, then new buyers may rush to the market, buy on a pullback.

Against the background of increased volatility, the US SEC postponed consideration of an application to launch Bitcoin-ETF from Bitwise. Such a prolonged expectation can increase the market reaction in the event of a positive decision at some point in the future.

The upcoming weekend may determine the further direction of the BTC price dynamics and the entire cryptocurrency market as a whole. For the time being, there are more signs that the pullback can be short-lived, retaining the generally upward bias of the bitcoin price for the coming months.

This article was written by FxPro

About the Author

Alexander is engaged in the analysis of the currency market, the world economy, gold and oil for more than 10 years. He gives commentaries to leading socio-political and economic magazines, gives interviews for radio and television, and publishes his own researches.

Did you find this article useful?

Advertisement