BTC price today

Bitcoin traders call for calm as BTC price slips 10% in a week

Bitcoin is seeing a “logical and healthy” pullback, say commentators, with $25,000 now a key BTC price line in the sand.

Bitcoin (BTC) barely held $27,000 on April 22 as another round of losses left bulls with little firepower.

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

Giant RSI support retest greets Bitcoin bulls

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD barely preserving the $27,000 mark on April 22 after the Wall Street trading week ended on a sour note.

In contrast to United States equities, which managed to seal modest gains on April 22, Bitcoin continued to suffer as analysts warned of a return toward $25,000.

With that, BTC/USD was down 10% for the week and 4% in April overall, according to data from monitoring resource Coinglass, amid a dramatic turnaround in fortune versus much of Q1.

Bitcoin monthly returns chart (screenshot). Source: Coinglass

For popular trader Credible Crypto, however, there was still every reason to hope that the long-term uptrend remained intact.

“If your macro thesis on Bitcoin has changed because of a $2,000 pullback after a $10,000+ vertical rally from 19k to 30k+ you’re doing it wrong,” he insisted in part of his latest Twitter commentary.

In an additional post, he argued that such price action is “common” in crypto markets.

“The last major retest we had was at 19k before our rally to 30k+. A retest of 25k here would be logical and healthy,” he stated.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Credible Crypto/Twitter

Financial information resource Stockmoney Lizards agreed, telling Twitter followers that the road higher may be slow and steady.

“After these huge green candles, we usually find some cooldown,” it wrote regarding the three-month BTC/USD chart.

“Short-/mid-term still bullish (3 months), but don’t expect it to go too fast.”

Crypto analyst CryptoCon delivered similar conclusions on the basis of the latest movements in Bitcoin’s relative strength index (RSI).

Used to determine overbought and oversold conditions at given price points, the RSI can help offer insights into forthcoming price trends.

“Short term #Bitcoin price action seems grim, but behind the scenes, the Weekly RSI has broken out of a 6-year downtrend and is now attempting to make support,” CryptoCon revealed, comparing the latest action to prior halving cycles. 

“Bitcoin is now at decision point. Continue 2019 parabolic price action, or take the healthier, steady 2015 approach?”

BTC/USD annotated chart with RSI. Source: CryptoCon/Twitter

BTC price analyst expects “stronger buy interest” near $25,000

Trader Skew, meanwhile, delved into the potential near-term price targets for BTC/USD, focusing on moving averages (MAs).

Related: Forget BTC price: The Bitcoin mining boom is quietly going parabolic

The zone north of $25,000 remained the principal point of interest, with the 200-week MA residing at $25,850.

The market composition remained apt to liquidate traders, with Coinglass data showing April 22 costing crypto longs another $173 million.

As Cointelegraph reported, April 19 saw the largest amount of long liquidations of 2023 so far.

Crypto liquidations chart. Source: Coinglass

Magazine: Crypto regulation: Does SEC Chair Gary Gensler have the final say?

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Bitcoin price fills CME futures gap but forecasts say $25K may be next

Bitcoin’s price risks more downside, with $28,000 now a key level to hold in order to avoid a return to the mid-$20,000s.

Bitcoin (BTC) hit new intraday lows on April 21 as traders warned that $25,000 might come next.

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

Trader: $25,000 BTC price would be “absolutely fine”

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD struggling to preserve $28,000 as support on Bitstamp.

The pair looked “weak,” in the words of one analyst, as overnight events failed to resurrect any sign of its previous uptrend.

Amid local lows of $27,828, prognoses for Bitcoin now focused on a potential return to the area around a key trend line.

“Bitcoin testing our key local demand at 28k and not getting the best reaction. If this level is lost, 25-26k is likely tested but this is no cause for concern,” Credible Crypto summarized alongside a YouTube video.

The video further described a return to $25,000 as “absolutely fine” and still an example of “a little bit of a deeper pullback” rather than a significant trend change.

The area around $25,500 constituted Bitcoin’s 200-week moving average — a support level originally lost in 2022 and only reclaimed in recent weeks.

BTC/USD 1-week candle chart (Bitstamp) with 200MA. Source: TradingView

A slightly more optimistic Crypto Tony nonetheless eyed the potential for a long position on the day.

“Approaching a high volume node + the EQ of his range. I am looking to play a long scalp here once I see the bulls stepping in,” he told Twitter followers.

“Another play if the bears take over, is to short a loss of the range down to the range low at $26,600.”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Crypto Tony/Twitter

One gap down, more to come?

The return to $28,000 meanwhile “completely” sealed a gap in CME Group’s Bitcoin futures.

Related: Can Bitcoin reclaim $30K? Watch these BTC price levels next

This was created earlier in April during Bitcoin’s run to local highs above $31,000, with market insight analyst Mickybull Crypto predicting a return to “fill” it.

CME Bitcoin futures annotated chart. Source: Mickybull/Twitter

In accompanying Twitter commentary, however, he acknowledged that “every” gap, including one much lower down on the chart near $20,000, should see the same fate.

“Price is currently sitting on TL support. If it loses 28000$, higher chances that we test 25500 – 26000$ and continue upward,” he tweeted as part of an additional analysis on the day.

Magazine: Bitcoin in Senegal: Why is this African country using BTC?

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Bitcoin ignores US jobs data as BTC price dip puts $28K support at risk

Eyes are on $28,000 support to hold in the event of continued downside, but Binance order book data warns that even this may be “rugged.”

Bitcoin (BTC) recovered from new 10-day lows at the April 20 Wall Street open as the United States jobs data boosted investor confidence.

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

BTC price: “Lights out” at $28,000?

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD reversing upward after hitting $28,360 on Bitstamp.

Amid an ongoing correction, the pair nonetheless failed to reclaim even $29,000 as support as U.S. unemployment data hinted that tighter financial conditions were working to cool inflation.

Spot gold became the main risk asset beneficiary, climbing back above $2,000 on the day.

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

U.S. equities opened higher but subsequently reversed their uptick, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index down 0.6%.

With BTC/USD circling $28,800 at the time of writing, popular Twitter trader and analyst Adam warned over the current range failing to hold.

“This seems like a ‘lose this level, and it’s lights out’ type of scenario,” he admitted alongside a chart showing the support range.

“Participation-wise, at lows pretty muted for my liking to get aggressive long here. Happy to buy reclaim above local S/R.”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Adam/Twitter

Fellow trader Pierre, meanwhile, eyed a retest of a “no-trade zone” extending down to $27,000.

An additional post explained the likely upside and downside targets should BTC/USD fail to preserve a trend in place for multiple weeks on daily timeframes.

Data from the Binance order book showed bid liquidity thinning below spot an hour before the jobs data, with the nearest substantial support now at $28,000.

“Note: Local support just got rugged,” monitoring resource Material Indicators, which produced the data and uploaded it to Twitter, wrote in part of accompanying commentary.

“Some was placed to absorb a dump just above $28k. If it gets hit, expecting $28k to get rugged.”

BTC/USD order book data (Binance). Source: Material Indicators/Twitter

Crypto liquidations cool after 2023 record

With funding rates negative, long liquidations took a breather on the day after April 19 saw the largest tally of 2023.

Related: Can Bitcoin reclaim $30K? Watch these BTC price levels next

According to data from Coinglass, cross-crypto long liquidations on that date totaled $262 million, with the April 20 number at just $34 million.

Crypto liquidations chart. Source: Coinglass

Magazine: Bitcoin in Senegal: Why is this African country using BTC?

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Bitcoin ‘mega whales’ send BTC price to $30K as volatility hits crypto

Bitcoin sees a sudden return to form as a reshuffle of order book liquidity precedes a spurt above crucial BTC price resistance.

Bitcoin (BTC) returned above $30,000 on April 18 as volatility preceded the day’s Wall Street open.

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

Bitcoin erases intraday losses

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView followed BTC/USD as the pair suddenly added $500, delivering daily gains of more than 3%.

The pair had previously worried traders, who watched as the $30,000 support looked set to remain as longer-term resistance.

Before crossing the $30,000 mark, Binance order book activity was a focus for monitoring resource Material Indicators, which identified bid liquidity moving closer to spot price.

“Some has already started moving closer to the active trading zone. Watching to see if more of it follows or if price drops back into the $28s to fill,” part of the accompanying commentary read.

A subsequent update indicated that the largest class of high-volume traders, so-called “mega whales,” was responsible for the upward momentum.

Reacting to the latest BTC price action, Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, was optimistic.

“There we go for Bitcoin. Breaks through $30K, which means that we’re back in the range,” he tweeted alongside a chart showing key levels.

“Most preferred a retest at $29.7K would suit continuation towards new highs and towards $40K.”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Michaël van de Poppe/ Twitter

Further volatility was meanwhile a possibility on lower timeframes ahead of the Wall Street open.

Those banking on further downside were already feeling the pressure, with data from Coinglass showing $16 million of BTC short liquidations on the day.

Bitcoin liquidations chart. Source: Coinglass

Ethereum leads altcoin rebound

Altcoins also felt the benefit of the sudden Bitcoin turnaround, with Ether (ETH) up 2% on the day.

Related: BTC price heading under $30K? 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

The largest altcoin by market cap headed back toward the top of its intraday trading range, having successfully preserved $2,000 as support. 

The bulls’ target to break remained at $2,140 from April 16, which represents ETH’s highest level since May 2022. 

Ether’s 15% gains versus Bitcoin since the Shapella upgrade have also not gone unnoticed

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

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The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Bitcoin sparks liquidations as analyst says BTC price may dip 12% more

Bitcoin loses 3% on the day, with the start of Wall Street trading failing to rescue BTC’s price from the loss of $30,000.

Bitcoin (BTC) headed lower into the April 17 Wall Street open as downside began liquidating longs.

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

Bitcoin’s price tipped for a break below $29,000

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD wicking to $29,247 on Bitstamp — its lowest in a week.

Gains for Asian stocks failed to rescue the losses on the day, these beginning immediately after the April 16 weekly close.

Traders, many of whom had predicted a retest of $30,000 support, were unsurprised, with many hoping that the event would form a “buy-the-dip” opportunity before Bitcoin moved higher.

Popular trader Crypto Ed said that BTC/USD had “swept the lows,” while others focused on the area around $28,500 as a potential bottom zone.

“BTC bid ladders down to $28.5k want to get filled, but it’s worth noting that the phrase, ‘There are no straight lines in trading’ applies in both directions,” monitoring resource Material Indicators summarized, noting shifts in liquidity on the Binance order book.

BTC/USD order book data (Binance). Source: Material Indicators/Twitter

Material Indicators co-founder Keith Alan eyed the 21-day moving average at $28,860 as short-term support.

Should this fail to hold, he said, it might spark a retest of the 200-week moving average at $25,860 — around 12% lower than the current spot price and 16.5% below the recent local high.

Despite the broad optimism, Bitcoin bulls were feeling the pain at the time of writing, with long liquidations for April 17 totaling nearly $29 million, according to data from Coinglass. Cross-crypto liquidations stood at nearly $67 million.

“Key level here for Bitcoin,” financial commentator Tedtalksmacro added.

“Reclaiming $29.7k is key for new highs… you wanted dip, this is the dip!”

Bitcoin liquidations chart. Source: Coinglass

U.S. dollar seeks “telegraphed” double bottom

United States equities saw a muted reaction at the open, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index both up by around 0.1%.

Related: BTC price heading under $30K? 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

The U.S. dollar made more solid gains, with the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) above 102 after bouncing from its lowest levels in a year.

U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

“Watch $DXY today,” analyst Justin Bennett told Twitter followers. 

“If this plays out, it’ll be the most telegraphed bottom that most failed to see bc they were promised a new bull market.”

U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) annotated chart. Source: Justin Bennett/Twitter

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The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

BTC price heading under $30K? 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin faces a battle for key BTC price support to start the week, while market participants stay optimistic about trend continuation.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week under $30,000 as analysts’ predictions of a short-term support retest come true.

The largest cryptocurrency saw a classic dive following its latest weekly close as the latest gains evaporated, but will they return?

Ahead of a fairly innocuous week for macro data releases, catalysts are likely to come elsewhere as BTC price action decides on a key support zone.

Much is at stake for traders, as the week prior offered the opportunity to reinvestigate altcoins as Bitcoin itself cooled its upside. With a retracement now in effect, attention will be on whether those altcoins can hold at their own higher levels.

Under the hood, it appears to be business as usual for Bitcoin, with network fundamentals already at or near all-time highs, showing no definitive signs of a comedown this week.

It may be too early to determine how price performance will impact hodlers, but the temptation to sell at 10-month highs must be clear, with the percentage of the overall BTC supply now in profit at an impressive 75%.

Cointelegraph takes a look at these factors and more in the weekly rundown of potential Bitcoin price triggers.

BTC price: $30,000 hangs in the balance

After a “boring” weekend for BTC price action, volatility returned in classic style at the April 16 weekly close.

With it came a return to $30,000 for BTC/USD, marking its first major support retest since hitting 10-month highs above $31,000 last week.

Traders and analysts had widely predicted the move, arguing that it would constitute a healthy retracement to prepare for the continuation of the uptrend.

Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, was among those eyeing a buy-in just below $30,000 but kept his options open in the case of a deeper correction.

“Bitcoin is getting towards the long areas. Back towards the range low, through which a sweep can be granted as an entry point towards $32K,” he told Twitter followers.

“$28,600 could also be a long entry, but then I think we won’t be starting to make new highs, for now.”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Michaël van de Poppe/ Twitter

Analytics resource Skew noted how the dip had played out on exchanges, mentioning a “clean divergence” between spot sellers and derivatives traders.

“This is exactly the BTC retest I was talking about,” popular trader and analyst Rekt Capital meanwhile continued, striking an optimistic note.

“$BTC is currently successfully retesting the top of the Bull Flag price broke out from a few days ago. Hold here would be a good contributing sign for continuation.”

An accompanying chart showed BTC/USD close to resting on an important trend line on daily timeframes.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Rekt Capital/ Twitter

A more cautious Daan Crypto Trades nonetheless flagged a tug-of-war between bulls and those simply trading the current range.

“Bitcoin Range Traders having the time of their lives while breakout traders are getting trapped on these range deviations/wicks,” part of commentary stated on the day.

“Likely to keep ranging until one side gives up.”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Daan Crypto Trades/ Twitter

Earnings dominate macro debate

After a key week of macroeconomic data releases, the coming days are set to offer risk asset traders some comparative respite.

United States jobless claims and manufacturing figures will come toward the end of the week, but the macro focus will be elsewhere — specifically on earnings.

These are due, among others, from heavyweights Tesla and Netflix, as well as a slew of banks — all keenly watched by market participants in the wake of recent events.

“Earnings season is officially here,” financial commentary resource The Kobeissi Letter summarized.

Last week, Tedtalksmacro, a financial commentator also focusing on crypto, summed up the current environment as highly favorable to continued Bitcoin upside.

“Price breaking bear market structure, macro data trending favourably, momentum oscillators reset + USD liquidity higher than pre-tightening levels… Yet the majority continue to look for swing shorts to new lows,” he stated.

“~500 days of bear has created a strong recency bias…”

However, the picture appears muddier when it comes to stock markets themselves, with consensus among market participants being hard to ascertain.

Sven Henrich, CEO of NorthmanTrader, called for more proof of a breakout for the S&P 500 “bull market” narrative to become valid.

“Some day they will be correct, but in my view, based on history, a new bull market is not confirmed until $SPX moves above the monthly 20MA and SUSTAINS such a move, i.e. defends it as support,” part of a tweet read last week.

Henrich was considering a claim by Tom Lee, managing partner and the head of research at Fundstrat Global Advisors, who described bears as “trapped.”

“The other measure here is the weekly 100MA which is just above 4200. While developments have been technically bullish since the October lows markets are near these key resistance points with the $VIX on the floor of its multi year uptrend,” Henrich continued.

“Will recent liquidity injections, which have contributed to suppressed volatility, be enough to sustain a move above resistance as the economy is approaching a recession per the Fed staff? That’s the big question I suppose everybody has to ask themselves.”

S&P 500 vs. VIX volatility index chart. Source: Sven Henrich/ Twitter

Bitcoin mining difficulty eyes fifth record-high in a row

In what is becoming a bi-weekly regular, Bitcoin network fundamentals are offering nothing but new all-time highs.

This week, difficulty is due to inch higher — currently by an estimated 0.45% — according to estimates from monitoring resource BTC.com.

Bitcoin network fundamentals overview (screenshot). Source: BTC.com

This will mark the fifth increase in a row, which has not happened since February 2022.

Since the start of 2023 alone, over 4 trillion has been added to the difficulty tally, while the hash rate is also continually setting new highs.

Raw data from MiningPoolStats recently estimated the latest all-time high as 413.4 exahashes per second (EH/s) on April 15. On Jan. 1, the estimated hash rate was 285 EH/s.

Bitcoin hash rate raw data (screenshot). Source: MiningPoolStats

As Cointelegraph previously reported, however, hash rate changes in and of themselves may not be relevant as a yardstick for Bitcoin health if measured using exact figures.

As Jameson Lopp, co-founder and chief technology officer of Casa, stated in a new blog post released on the same date as the all-time high hash rate estimate, all may not be as it seems.

“Whenever you see someone claiming that a change in the network hashrate is newsworthy, you should always question the method and time range used to achieve the hashrate estimate,” he summarized after comparing various methods of hash rate estimation.

In Bitcoin, only old hands remain

As $30,000 appears and gets tested as support, the temptation to sell among those who weathered the 2022 bear market is increasing.

Mean on-chain transaction volumes have hit multimonth highs, according to data from analytics firm Glassnode.

BTC mean transaction volume. Source: Glassnode

Overall, more than three-quarters of the mined BTC supply is now in profit — the most in a year and arguably a clear incentive to take some of that profit off the table.

BTC % addresses in profit. Source: Glassnode

Analyzing market composition, Glassnode lead on-chain analyst Checkmate had some encouraging conclusions.

Long-term holders currently outnumber short-term holders or speculators significantly, with the 2022 bear market sparking a shakeout that has left the market more resilient to price fluctuations.

“Nobody except the hardcore HODLers remains, nobody knows we’re up 100% from the lows. They will probably only be back for real as we approach ATHs,” he predicted in part of a tweet this week.

Checkmate added that “Almost none of the folks who have been here for several months+, are spending right now.”

“They appear to require and demand higher prices before they sell. I certainly know do,” he wrote.

Crypto “greed” inches from November 2021 peak

Bitcoin may be far from its all-time high of $69,000, but one metric rapidly homing in on repeating the climate of November 2021 is the Crypto Fear & Greed Index.

Related: What is the Crypto Fear and Greed Index?

The return to $30,000 was marked by a rapid increase in “greed” throughout the crypto market, its data shows.

As of April 17, Fear & Greed scored 69/100, just 10% away from its 75/100 mark from when BTC/USD traded at its most recent peak.

Cointelegraph has often reported on the potentially overheated atmosphere within sentiment this year, and now nerves appear to be spreading.

“Now this isn’t a metric I swear by as it is lagging, but it gives a good indication of when to look to de-risk and be cautious,” popular trader Crypto Tony reasoned about the Index over the weekend.

“The last time we came up to the 75 region was back on November 7th 2021 when Bitcoin was trading at over $65,000. Food for thought.”

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

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

BTC price targets see $33K next as Bitcoin eyes key resistance flip

Bitcoin faces a formidable trend line in $31,000, with United States equities providing a continued boost for BTC price upside.

Bitcoin (BTC) preserved new 10-month highs at the April 14 Wall Street open as analysts kept hoping for further gains.

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

$31,000 revealed as make-or-break trend line

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD consolidating around $30,700 after spiking past the $31,000 mark.

The pair saw no major retracement as it headed further into grounds it originally lost in June 2022.

Now, market participants eyed the potential for bulls to capitalize on existing momentum with the help of positive macro trends.

United States equities opened higher, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index both up 0.3% at the time of writing.

“With stocks opening up hot, BTC was able to maintain above the previous range high,” popular trader and analyst Josh Rager told Twitter followers after the open.

“Think we can see a retest and push higher here above $31k+.”

BTC/USD, S&P 500 charts. Source: Josh Rager/Twitter

Others also considered the possibility of BTC/USD hitting $32,000 or more in the short term before taking a more pronounced time out.

“I believe the next stop is just a hair above $33,000, where we’ll encounter the 100 moving average, on the weekly time frame,” macro analyst Jesse Dow continued in part of Twitter analysis during the week.

“Don’t forget we have bullish divergence and convergence on the weekly. And this has NEVER failed after we’ve seen at least a 75% drop in Bitcoin’s price, from the previous cycle.”

Zooming out, the importance of the current range for spot price became all the more visible, with $31,000 acting as support through 2021 until the June 2022 breakdown.

Brandt stays long Bitcoin

As various popular figures called the start of an “altseason,” one staying firmly bullish on BTC was veteran trader Peter Brandt.

Related: What Bitcoin bear market? BTC price closely copying old halving cycles

In a tweet on April 13, Brandt revealed long positions on Bitcoin in addition to stocks in a further suggestion that the worst of the bear market was now over.

Previously, former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes had revealed a rethink on his own investment strategy, opting to increase crypto exposure.

“The ensuing Bitcoin rally will be one of the most hated ever,” he predicted in a blog post released last month.

Magazine: Bitcoin in Senegal: Why is this African country using BTC?

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Bitcoin price spikes above $31K as Ethereum gains spark ‘altseason’ calls

Bitcoin and Ethereum lead a wave of excitement over future crypto gains, with analysis concluding that the “bottom is in.“

Bitcoin (BTC) broke through $31,000 on April 14 as bulls hoped altcoins would soon follow.

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

Analyst eyes potential dip under $30,000 

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView captured new 10-month highs of $31,035 for BTC/USD on Bitstamp.

The pair had risen gradually the day before after a consolidatory period around new macroeconomic data prints from the United States.

These had furthered the bullish risk asset narrative, with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Inflation (PPI) prints showing inflation slowing faster than expected.

While Bitcoin did not react immediately, the latest uptick reinforced market participants’ convictions over continued strength and a break with the long-term downtrend.

“Bitcoin looks strong, but will have some shallow corrections in an upward trend,” Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight forecasted on the day.

“I’ve marked $31.7-32K as important resistance point. However, $25K was the level everyone wanted to buy. This will probably shift to $28.5K, and then nobody buys. I’d prefer to focus on $29.7K.”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Michaël van de Poppe/ Twitter

Van de Poppe referenced previous concerns over a deeper correction on BTC/USD, with nervous price targets including the 200-week moving average at around $25,500 and even $22,000.

Related: Best and worst countries for crypto taxes — plus crypto tax tips

Popular trader Crypto Tony nonetheless advised potential long position entries to wait until confirmation of new support levels.

“We have now crossed into the range of $31,000 EQ and $32,300 Range high,” part of the day’s Twitter analysis stated, alongside a chart showing the potential high, low and equilibrium (EQ) level of the new range.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Crypto Tony/ Twitter

“Altseason is underway”

Once again stealing the show, however, were altcoins, led by Ether (ETH) after its “Shapella” upgrade.

Related: Bitcoin’s dominance knocked by ETH’s post-Shapella rally

After teasing a reclaim of $2,000 the day prior, ETH/USD went on to hit $2,130, its highest level since May 2022.

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

Unsurprisingly, reactions were highly complimentary of the overall crypto market strength.

“With the $BTC bottom being in and our final 5th impulse confirmed (imo). I believe that the bottom is likely also in on a lot (not all) of alts,” popular trader Credible Crypto summarized, referring to a theory from a recent YouTube video.

“Coins like $ETH and various others have likely seen their lows and have started the journey to new all time highs.”

Credible Crypto acknowledged that it was Bitcoin “in the drivers seat mid-term,” and that it would take a cooling off for BTC price action to stimulate rapid altcoin growth.

That said, the sentiment was peppered with references to “altseason” on the day, including from former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes.

Financial commentator Tedtalksmacro likewise declared altseason “underway,” noting the total altcoin market cap adding $62 billion in two weeks.

Others variously referenced “mini altseason” and “altseason 2.0,” arguing that copycat gains on altcoins should follow an initial surge led by Bitcoin.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Bitcoin-friendly PPI data boosts bulls as Ether price fights for $2K

Bitcoin fails to react to a positive PPI print, while Ether gets busy defending the $2,000 mark, which it reclaimed for the first time in eight months.

Bitcoin (BTC) preserved $30,000 support at the April 12 Wall Street open as more United States macroeconomic data boosted bulls.

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

PPI hints further inflation drops to come

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD hovering near $30,250 on Bitstamp.

Amid a slowdown in volatility, U.S. Producer Price Inflation (PPI) data provided a timely hint that inflation was slowing faster than expected.

Headline PPI came in at 2.7% year-on-year versus market expectations of 3% — an encouraging result for risk assets.

Financial commentary resource The Kobeissi Letter was among those noting that the month-on-month drop in PPI values was the largest since the peak in March 2022.

“The overall PPI inflation rate has fallen from 11.3% to 2.7% since June 2022, less than 1 year ago. There also has not been a monthly increase in PPI inflation since June 2022,” it added.

Reacting, market commentator Tedtalksmacro suggested that the numbers would also provide a snowball effect for another key inflation metric, the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the March print for which also beat prognoses.

“Indicative of further falls in CPI/PCE in coming months,” he summarized in comments about the PPI result.

Inflation subsiding faster has traditionally buoyed crypto asset performance as it raises hopes that U.S. economic policy will become less restrictive.

A key event for market participants now will be the Federal Reserve’s next interest rate change, the decision on which is due in May.

According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, expectations still favored a further rate hike of 0.25%, with PPI notably doing little to change the mood.

Fed target rate probabilities chart. Source: CME Group

Bitcoin, Ether struggle at key levels

While holding $30,000 as support, meanwhile, Bitcoin failed to convince everyone that its 10-month peak would stay.

Related: Can Ethereum crack $2K? ETH price inches closer despite new unlocked supply

Monitoring resource Material Indicators warned of a bearish signal on its proprietary trading tools, within a broader bullish context.

A snapshot of buy and sell levels on the Binance order book prior to PPI, meanwhile, showed the strongest resistance parked at $30,500.

“Near range bid liquidity may limit the downside volatility, but this is the WildWest of Crypto so anything goes. Watch for rugs,” Material Indicators wrote in part of accompanying comments.

BTC/USD order book data (Binance). Source: Material Indicators/Twitter

As Cointelegraph reported, it was largest altcoin Ether (ETH) stealing the limelight on the day, passing $2,000 for the first time since August last year.

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

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

What Bitcoin bear market? BTC price closely copying old halving cycles

Bitcoin continues to fulfill its halving cycle roadmap in classic style compared to 2013 and 2017, the latest BTC price metrics show.

Bitcoin (BTC) price action is right on track when it comes to sealing new all-time highs, new data suggests.

A suite of price metrics from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode released on April 11 hints that Bitcoin’s current halving cycle is playing out in classic style.

BTC price closely resembles prior halving cycles

With BTC/USD up over 70% in 2023 and far from its $15,600 lows in November 2022, analysts are already considering the role of next year’s block subsidy halving.

Set to cut the amount of BTC miners “mint” per block from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC; the upcoming halving represents an emission decrease exactly like others that preceded it.

Bets are therefore increasing over the impact on Bitcoin price performance, likewise copying past halvings, with the event itself acting as a springboard for all-time highs.

A look at Glassnode’s figures underscores the similarities of the current halving cycle to previous ones. Despite comparatively muted gains in percentage terms, BTC/USD is now trending upward following what increasingly appears to be a bear market bottom.

Bitcoin’s price performance since halving. Source: Glassnode

Since its latest all-time high, tracking price action likewise places this cycle firmly within the historical context.

Bitcoin’s price performance since all-time highs. Source: Glassnode

Related: Best and worst countries for crypto taxes — plus crypto tax tips

Meanwhile, in an analysis late last month, data resource Ecoinometrics offered additional insight into recent performance.

New all-time highs are also due, it agreed, bar a macroeconomic recession distorting the roadmap.

“Bitcoin’s price action suggests a bottom has formed, but with an impending global recession, it’s premature to assume,” it reasoned.

“Economic uncertainty will increase demand for safe havens, but Bitcoin still trades very much like a risk asset.”

Bitcoin’s price performance after the third halving. Source: Ecoinometrics

Up only to $180,000?

As Cointelegraph reported, the belief that the 2024 halving cycle will continue the good times has gone nowhere during the latest bear market.

Related: Bitcoin 2022 bear market ‘usual’ despite key trend line loss — Analyst

Filbfilb, a co-founder of the trading suite DecenTrader, recently doubled down on his conviction that Bitcoin’s all-time high next cycle will come in 2025 and see a BTC price tag of around $180,000.

He noted that as time passes, Bitcoin price gains will see a “tapering effect” — smaller comparative gains in percentage terms with each cycle.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.