Interest rate

Blockchain-based private loans hit $582M, doubling from last year

The average APR offered by blockchain credit protocols is 9.65% compared to an average personal loan interest rate of 11.5%, data shows.

Blockchain-based lending is regaining momentum this year, with the value of active tokenized private credit now sitting at $582 million — a staggering 128% increase from a year ago.

While still far off from its peak of $1.5 billion in June 2022, according to data from real-world asset loan tracker RWA.xyz, the resurgence could signal that loan-seekers are looking for blockchain-based alternatives to traditional financiers amid a recent rise in interest rates.

The current average percentage rate is 9.64% for blockchain-based credit protocols, while financiers have been offering small business bank loan interest rates between 5.75% and 11.91%, according to a Dec. 1 report by NerdWallet.

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Blockchain-based private loans hit $582M, doubling from 2022

The average APR offered by blockchain credit protocols is 9.65% compared to an average personal loan interest rate of 11.5%, data shows.

Blockchain-based lending has regained momentum in 2023, with the value of active tokenized private credit now sitting at $582 million — a staggering 128% increase from a year ago.

While still far from its peak of $1.5 billion in June 2022, according to data from real-world asset loan tracker RWA.xyz, the resurgence could signal that loan-seekers are looking for blockchain-based alternatives to traditional financiers amid a recent rise in interest rates.

The current average percentage rate is 9.64% for blockchain-based credit protocols, while financiers have been offering small business bank loan interest rates between 5.75% and 11.91%, according to a Dec. 1 report by NerdWallet.

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US Fed 2024 rate cut could prove perfect catalyst for BTC halving

A cut in the U.S. Federal Reserve rate is seen as bullish, as it boosts risk appetite among investors.

Goldman Sachs, the second-largest investment bank in the world, has predicted that the United States Federal Reserve could cut interest rates twice in the next two years, starting as early as the third quarter of 2024. 

Interest rates have a strong correlation to investors’ risk appetite. Goldman Sachs predicted the first Fed rate cut by December 2024, but this forecast has been brought forward to Q3 of 2024 due to cooling inflation, Reuters reported on Dec. 11.

The lender expects the two Fed cuts to bring interest rates to 4.875% by the end of 2024, rather than its previous forecast of 5.13%. 

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Historical Bitcoin price fractal hints at rally toward $50K

Bitcoin’s price in 2023 is mirroring a 2015 fractal that saw BTC price doubling from $350 to $700 in seven months.

Bitcoin (BTC) could rally toward $50,000 in 2023, according to a historical price fractal highlighted by popular market analyst Mags.

Bitcoin price trend in 2015 vs. 2023

The chart fractal highlights the similarities between Bitcoin’s ongoing price trends and those recorded after the completion of the 2013–2015 bear market.

That includes Bitcoin’s consolidation inside the $200–$300 range between January 2015 and August 2015, which appears identical to its consolidation between the $18,500–$25,000 range after the supposed completion of its 2021–2022 bear market.

BTC/USD price performance comparison between 2015 and 2023. Source: TradingView/Mags

BTC’s price broke above the $16,000–$25,000 range in March 2023, prompting Mags to highlight its resemblance to the breakout above the $200–$300 range in October 2015.

Since this resulted in a rally toward $700 in June 2016, the analyst sees the scenario potentially repeating in 2023, with BTC’s price doubling to $50,000.

“Being bearish here [when Bitcoin’s price is around $28,000] is like being bearish at $350,” Mags added.

Liquidity crunch may spoil Bitcoin price rally

The bullish argument for Bitcoin comes amid anticipations that the United States Federal Reserve would slow the pace of its interest rate hikes.

Due to lower rate expectations, the yield on the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury note has declined. That, in turn, has boosted investors’ appetite for zero-yielding assets, such as Bitcoin and gold.

U.S. 10-year weekly chart versus BTC/USD and XAU/USD. Source: TradingView

In addition, lower yields have also sapped U.S. dollar demand, with the dollar losing 1.33% in 2023 versus a basket of top foreign currencies. Since Bitcoin’s value is largely denominated in the dollar, it means higher prices for BTC/USD.

Related: Latest Bitcoin price data suggests double top above $200K in 2025

However, Bloomberg analyst Mike McGlone has cautioned about a potential bull trap in the Bitcoin market due to a mounting liquidity crunch.

He said:

“It may be illogical to expect the stock market, crude oil, copper, and the Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index (BGCI) sustain the recent bounces with year-over-year measures of money supply and commercial bank deposits falling around 2%.”

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.

Will Bitcoin break above $30K? New JOLTS data, weaker dollar boost chances

Bitcoin price is poised to reach $31,000 in April amid a lower vacancy turnout in the U.S., which risks crashing the dollar strength index to a yearly low.

On April 4, the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the greenback’s performance versus a basket of six leading foreign currencies, dropped by 0.5% after demand for workers in the world’s largest economy declined.

BTC’s price eyes breakout with dollar at two-month lows

Bitcoin (BTC) has since grown 3.5% to around $28,800, continuing its extremely negative correlation with the dollar. The BTC/USD pair now eyes a breakout at $30,000, a psychological resistance level, due to hopes that the greenback will weaken further in 2023.

DXY vs. BTC/USD year-to-date returns and correlation coefficient. Source: TradingView

Meanwhile, the February Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) showed that the number of official job vacancies dropped below 10 million for the first time since May 2021.

In other words, while two jobs were available for each unemployed person at some point last year, there are now just 1.67.

U.S. vacancies for each job seeker. Source: Bloomberg

Interestingly, the implicit federal funds rate for January 2023 declined after the latest JOLTS data was published, in a similar fashion amid March’s bank failures.

The rate expectations are now around 4% compared to about 5% before the banking crisis, suggesting the market expects the Federal Reserve to stop, if not reverse, its interest rate hike program.

Implicit federal funds rate drop after JOLTS data. Source: Bloomberg

Worth noting is that the JOLTS readings are backward-looking, meaning the latest data does not include March’s sudden wave of bank failures and well-publicized layoffs at McDonald’s, Walmart and across technology companies, including Amazon and Apple.

Thus, the market is likely to see even worse JOLTS data in the next few months. This may also line up with the next Federal Open Market Committee meeting in May, prompting a dovish response, as a Reuters poll of forex strategists anticipates.

Lower rates should pressure the dollar downward and, in turn, Bitcoin higher, as long as their traditionally inverse price correlation remains. 

Bitcoin’s price painting bullish continuation pattern

From a technical perspective, Bitcoin’s price eyes an extended price rally in April as it paints an ascending triangle pattern.

Related: Bitcoin breakout ‘matter of time,’ says analysis with BTC price at $28K

An ascending triangle is a bullish continuation pattern that appears when the price trends between a horizontal trendline resistance and a rising trendline support.

It completes when the price breaks out of the triangle in the direction of the previous trend and rises by as much as the triangle’s maximum height.

BTC/USD daily price chart featuring ascending triangle breakout setup. Source: TradingView

Applying the scenario on the ongoing BTC price trend brings $31,000 as its next upside target, up around 8.5% from current price levels.

Meanwhile, the DXY has the potential to drop by another 1% in April to test the lower range of its long-standing support channel (purple) at around 100.86.

DXY daily price chart. Source: TradingView

The lower rate scenario risks pushing DXY below the support channel to a new yearly low, with some analysts anticipating a drop toward 95.

Ultimately, such a scenario will likely mean another leg-up for the cryptocurrency markets and a potential $35,000 target for Bitcoin in Q2.

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.

Will the Fed stop rate hikes? 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin targets $30,000 as a new week of macro surprises gets going — what might happen next?

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week in an unmistakably bullish position as it passes $28,000.

Crypto markets continue to climb on the back of the banking crisis, which still rages in the United States and abroad — where will they go next?

After a week of chaos for macro markets and solid gains as a result, Bitcoin and altcoins are circling levels, which some have not seen for nine months.

The 2022 bear market is feeling like an increasingly distant memory as old resistance levels tumble and bulls attempt to cement newly-reclaimed support.

This week, as last, there are all sorts of potential hurdles to overcome — the Federal Reserve will decide on its next interest rate changes and new macroeconomic data will drop.

Markets will likely stay volatile as a result, and any further unexpected events from the banking sector will only add to the instability.

At the same time, Bitcoin’s own ecosystem is set to become stronger than ever as network fundamentals launch to fresh all-time highs.

Cointelegraph takes a look at five of the key phenomena to keep an eye on when it comes to BTC price action in the coming week.

Fed rate hike cycle in doubt

The macro event of the week is undeniably the March 22 Fed decision on interest rate hikes — or lack of them.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) faces a stark challenge to its current quantitative tightening (QT) policy in place for the past eighteen months.

The unfolding banking crisis has put into doubt the Fed’s ability to keep raising interest rates, a policy which commentators argue was the death knell for struggling regional banks.

The Fed is nonetheless caught between a rock and a hard place. Raising rates would keep inflation in check but further punish the economy, possibly unleashing a new wave of bank failures.

“Next week’s FOMC is gearing up to be one of the most interesting ones in a while, with no one really agreeing on what’s gonna happen,” engineer and trader Tree of Alpha summarized.

“Odds at leaning towards 25bps, but it’s a wildcard. Planning on longing =50 bps as the safe play.”

According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, consensus as of March 20 favored the Fed hiking by 25 basis points, rather than pausing hikes altogether. The week prior, Goldman Sachs had predicted that rates would plateau, while Nomura even forecast a rate cut.

Fed target rate probabilities chart. Source: CME Group

“This week, the long anticipated March Fed interest rate decision comes out. Currently, markets are pricing in a 62% chance of a 25 bps rate hike. However, markets also see 100 bps of rate cuts by December,” financial commentary resource, The Kobeissi Letter, wrote in part of analysis about the long-term rate hike roadmap.

Kobeissi and others also queried how struggling bank stocks would react at the next Wall Street open, given the latest government moves over the weekend.

These included a buyout of Credit Suisse, the European banking giant, which saw a particularly violent reaction to the U.S. meltdown.

“Credit Suisse, $CS, was worth $10 billion a month ago and sold for pennies on the Dollar,” Kobeissi continued about fellow bank UBS purchasing Credit Suisse and getting $100 billion in government liquidity.

“The government said $CS had ‘serious risk of bankruptcy.’ A shareholder vote was bypassed. Regulators knew it was a matter of hours for bankruptcy. This deal was made out of desperation.”

Bitcoin spot price eyes $30,000

With that, the mood on Bitcoin and crypto markets has understandably taken a fresh turn for the better as the week begins.

At the time of writing, BTC/USD traded above $28,400, according to data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView.

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

Already at nine-month highs, the pair managed to beat out bears during a consolidation period last week to return to target levels not seen in almost a year.

Chief among these is $30,000, a psychologically significant level surrounded by considerable historical liquidity. For monitoring resource Material Indicators and others, meanwhile, a key support level to hold is the 200-week moving average (MA).

Popular trader Crypto Tony focused on $27,700 to support the bull case and potential for an attack on $30,000.

“$27,700 ensured we are now in the next range between $27,700 – $31,000. Using $27,700 as a level that bulls need to hold to sustain a move up to $30,000 level,” he tweeted.

“Interesting week for sure. My stop loss on my main long remains at $25,500.”

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

In fresh analysis, meanwhile, fellow trader Crypto Chase highlighted $28,500 as a potential short entry, while also entertaining a “somewhat likely” bull case in which selling only kicks in above $33,000.

“Please note that I am not abandoning the idea of 28.5K~ shorts. These may still present a great opportunity around FOMC this Wednesday. At the moment though, I cannot imagine an immediate local top,” he explained.

“I think a rejection could occur there and I’ll still look for the trade, but for those who attempt to hold a 28.5K short back to 12K may end up stopped out in that 33K liquidity pool.”

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

Analyst heralds end of bear market

For some analyzing the long-term picture, however, Bitcoin has already broken out of a bear market in place since the comedown from its all-time highs and the start of Fed tightening in late 2021.

The weekly close came in at just above $28,000, making it Bitcoin’s highest since early June, 2022.

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

For trader, analyst and podcast host Scott Melker, known as “The Wolf of All Streets,” this has clear implications.

“The bear market is officially over,” he proclaimed on the basis of the weekly chart data.

“$BTC made it’s first higher high ($25,212) since the all time high . That confirms a new bullish trend. Price can still go down, but that would be a new trend, not a continuation of the previous bear market. Congrats everyone.”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Scott Melker/ Twitter

Melker linked to a similar post from August 2019, just after BTC/USD had passed $13,000 in a comeback from the pit of its previous bear market.

Equally buoyant about weekly timeframes is trader and analyst Rekt Capital, who continues to eye a disintegration of Bitcoin’s “macro downtrend.”

On quarterly timeframes, Rekt Capital is monitoring a “bullish engulfing” event in the making, something which has triggered significant upside in and of itself in the past.

New all-time highs due for Bitcoin difficulty

In a classic move, Bitcoin’s network fundamentals are refusing to abandon their trip to the moon.

The latest estimates from BTC.com and MiningPoolStats show that both hash rate and difficulty are in “up only” mode this month.

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

Difficulty is set to adjust upwards 3.26% in the coming days, making it almost 45 trillion.

Hash rate hit a local peak on March 13, but is now trending upwards once again as miners respond to the latest price action.

Among miners, however, a divergence is playing out. On a rolling 30-day basis, miners’ BTC balances continue to decline, according to data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode.

Bitcoin miner net position change chart. Source: Glassnode

The most greed since Bitcoin price was $69,000

There may still be reason to be afraid of the current bullish surge in Bitcoin and crypto more broadly.

Related: Bitcoin levels to watch as BTC price eyes highest weekly close in 9 months

A look at sentiment data suggests that the majority of the market is becoming overly confident in the good times continuing.

The Crypto Fear & Greed Index, which uses a basket of factors to produce a normalized sentiment score for crypto, is now at 66/100, firmly in its “greed” zone and its highest since November 2021.

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

Its warnings are being corroborated by social media users. A survey from research firm Santiment, which has garnered almost 15,000 responses, shows that most believe that BTC/USD will break $30,000 as the next major crypto market event.

Santiment Twitter survey (screenshot). Source: Santiment/ Twitter

“Crowd bullishness is doubling up bearishness for crypto’s top 2 assets,” Santiment commented about the results.

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 is the time value of money (TVM)?

Understanding the time value of money is essential for making sound financial decisions and maximizing returns on investment.

Time value of money, explained

The time value of money (TVM) is the concept that money available today is worth more than the same amount of money in the future. While inflation gradually weakens the purchasing power of money, its worth can rise over time by being invested or earning interest.

The time value of money is an essential concept in finance and investing. Based on the interest rate and the time period involved, it is used to determine the present value of future cash flows, such as investment returns or loan repayments.

Related: What is opportunity cost? A definition and examples

Several financial calculations — such as future value, present value and annuities — can be used to show the TVM. Understanding the time value of money is crucial in making informed financial decisions, such as comparing investment options, deciding on loan terms and planning for retirement.

Annuities can be of two types: ordinary annuity and annuity due. In an ordinary annuity, the cash flows occur at the end of each period; while in an annuity due, the cash flows occur at the beginning of each period.

Does the time value of money concept apply to crypto?

The time value of money concept can also be applied in the world of cryptocurrency. In fact, it is an important principle to consider when evaluating the potential profitability of investing in cryptocurrencies.

Crypto lending platforms

The use of crypto lending platforms is one way that the time value of money principle is applied in the world of cryptocurrencies. These services enable users to earn interest on their investments by lending their cryptocurrency to other users.

The supply and demand of the cryptocurrency, the duration of the loan term, and the risk involved with the borrower are just a few of the variables that affect the interest rate that users can receive on their cryptocurrency investments. Due to the time value of money, the interest rate investors can earn on their investment increases with the length of the lending period.

Staking

Another application of the time value of money concept in crypto is through the use of staking. Staking entails keeping a specific quantity of cryptocurrency locked on a blockchain in order to benefit the network and sustain it. Staking incentives are typically driven by the length of time a user locks in their cryptocurrency, with longer staking periods leading to bigger rewards due to the time value of money.

Determine the potential future value of a cryptocurrency investment

Furthermore, the TVM concept can also be used to assess the potential future value of a cryptocurrency investment. The value of a cryptocurrency might change over time due to various variables, including market supply and demand, legislative changes and technological improvements, just like the value of any other investment.

Related: How to trade cryptocurrencies: A beginner’s guide to buy and sell digital currencies

The time value of money must be taken into account when estimating the possible future worth of a cryptocurrency investment, as the value of the investment will vary depending on how long it takes to reach its full potential.

‘Biggest week of the year’ — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin price action, sideways since FTX, could see snap volatility thanks to the “most important” CPI print of the year.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts one of the most important macro weeks of the year in a precarious position below $17,000.

After its latest weekly close, BTC/USD showed little upward momentum prior to the Dec. 12 Wall Street open.

With volatility yet to appear, the largest cryptocurrency continues to trade in a narrow range, and analysts are increasingly impatient for new catalysts.

These, they agree, should come in the next few days — United States economic data is due, and its content and impact on economic policy will likely have a significant impact on crypto markets.

Elsewhere, the uneasy status quo continues — Bitcoin miners are struggling, sentiment lacks inspiration and traders are increasingly drawing comparisons to the pits of previous bear markets.

Where could BTC price action head in the coming week? Cointelegraph takes a look at five factors set to influence trajectory.

“Most important” CPI print forms key focus

The phrase on everyone’s lips this week is Consumer Price Index (CPI) — the key measure of consumer prices inflation in the United States.

While coming every month, the latest CPI print, due Dec. 13 for the month of November, has additional importance for the market. With two weeks to go until the end of the year, the chances of a risk asset “Santa rally,” for instance, now hang in the balance.

It is not just the CPI report itself; the Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will decide on rate hikes this week, and Chair Jerome Powell will deliver a speech that market commentators will scrutinize for signs of policy change.

“CPI Report Tuesday, FED rate hikes and JPow speaks on Wednesday. Stay tuned for volatility,” on-chain analytics resource Material Indicators summarized at the weekend.

Popular trader MisterSpread added that further decisions outside the U.S. made for “one of the most (if not the most) important” weeks of the year.

“Tuesday’s CPI will yet again be ‘the most important CPI release ever’, this time because the market has set it up to be with its epic 2-month short squeeze rally,” trading firm QCP Capital meanwhile wrote in a market update.

QCP continued:

“A higher-than-expected CPI print and more hawkish Fed have the potential to invalidate this rally, like we saw in the April and August reversals. On the other hand, another disinflationary print could see many chase a continuation of the rally into year-end.”

Regardless of whether up or down, CPI tends to induce market volatility surrounding its release, with calm only returning after the rates decision Powell’s accompanying speech.

According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, current consensus calls for a smaller 50-basis-point hike in interest rates this month, signaling a comedown for the Fed in what could yet turn out to be a significant turning point in policy.

At the time of writing, the probability of 50 basis points stood at around 75%.

Fed target rate probabilities chart. Source: CME Group

Also describing this week as the “biggest week of the year,” financial commentary resource The Kobeissi Letter nonetheless had a warning for investors.

“Imagine the madness if the Fed doesn’t pivot or November CPI is above October’s 7.7% print,” part of a tweet on Dec. 8 read:

“This is why you don’t want a Fed controlled market.”

BTC spot price waits for action

With everyone focused on the Fed, traders understand that policy and macro numbers will de facto dictate what happens to BTC/USD in the coming days.

Aside from force majeure, there may be little to do but sit and wait for data to roll in.

In the meantime, BTC/USD continues to range in all-too-familiar territory around the $17,000 mark, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows.

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

Unchanged for days, the pair seems directionless as the dust from the FTX implosion continues to settle.

“BTC has been bouncing between Realized Price (green) & Balanced Price (yellow) since June,” analytics resource On-Chain College summarized on the mid-term trend:

“I’m interested in a sustained movement outside of this range, which has yet to occur.”

BTC/USD “Bear market levels” chart. Source: On-Chain College/ Twitter

Some had more categorical takes on BTC price performance. Matthew Dixon, founder and CEO of crypto rating platform Evai, called for Bitcoin to “complete the overall correction higher” to cancel out most of the losses from FTX.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Matthew Dixon/ Twitter

At the same time, popular commentator Profit Blue maintained that $10,000 would reenter the radar before the start of 2023.

“Bitcoin is headed to $10k and it will likely bottom out there soon. Pay attention to the details,” commentary on an accompanying chat read.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Profit Blue/ Twitter

U.S. dollar teases renewed strength

Keenly anticipating a change of trend for the U.S. dollar, meanwhile, trader Bluntz warned that Bitcoin may yet deliver a bearish end to the year.

The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), under pressure for weeks, has begun to seal higher lows on daily timeframes, potentially setting up dollar strength for a rebound.

This, thanks to inverse correlation, would spell trouble for crypto markets across the board.

“quite an ugly 4h about to close here, looking like a lower high on 4h timeframe and lots of catalysts upcoming this week,” Bluntz wrote in a Twitter update on the day:

“dxy also putting in a higher low on daily and looking strong. my gut is telling me we’re en route to a new low sub 15k for btc which i will happily buy.”

A previous post from Dec. 5 called for the $15,000 zone to be reached in Q1 next year.

Fellow trader Doctor Profit meanwhile noted that DXY had returned to a key “breakout” zone from June, and that short-term cues should thus be decisive for trajectory.

“DXY successfully retested its June breakout for the first time,” he stated last week:

“The mother of all decisions is coming, expect huge volatility next week. The incoming DXY move will decide the fate of the crypto and stock market.”

DXY has yet to reclaim its 200-day moving average (MA). However, the loss of which was recently described as “lights out” for the U.S. dollar.

U.S. dollar index (DXY) 1-day candle chart with 200 MA. Source: TradingView

Supply shock ratio nears 10-year high

Behind the scenes, Bitcoin is delivering subtle hints that all may not be so bad when it comes to overall network strength.

According to the Illiquid Supply Shock Ratio (ISSR) metric, there is a higher chance of a major supply-induced rush for BTC than at any point in almost a decade.

ISSR, created by statistician Willy Woo and crypto researcher William Clemente, “attempts to model the probability of a Supply Shock forming,” on-chain analytics firm Glassnode explains.

Simply put, it assesses how much of the supply is available versus current demand, and given the ongoing trend of ferreting BTC away into cold storage, the signal is clear.

As of Dec. 10, ISSR measured 3.537, its highest since August 2014.

Bitcoin Illiquid Supply Shock Ratio (ISSR) chart. Source: Glassnode

Hayes says Bitcoin miner selling “is over”

A final silver lining for the future comes courtesy of Bitcoin mining research from former BitMEX CEO, Arthur Hayes.

Related: Bitcoin’s boring price action allows XMR, TON, TWT and AXS to gather strength

In his latest blog post on Dec. 9, Hayes, well known as an industry commentator, took exception to the pervading narrative surrounding miners’ financial buoyancy and its impact on markets.

As Cointelegraph reported, increasing sales of BTC by miners struggling to stay afloat have led to concerns that a major capitulation event could flood the market with liquidity.

This is not the case, Hayes says, going further to show that “even if miners sold all the Bitcoin they produced each day, it would barely impact the markets at all.”

“Therefore, we can ignore this ongoing selling pressure, as it is easily absorbed by the markets,” he determined.

Hayes continued that the bulk of BTC sales by both miners and lenders, known as centralized lending firms (CELs), had likely already occurred.

“I believe that the forced selling of Bitcoin by CELs and miners is over. If you had to sell, you would have already done so,” he wrote:

“There is no reason why you would hold on if you had an urgent need for fiat to remain a going concern. Given that almost every major CEL has either ceased withdrawals (pointing to insolvency at best) or gone bankrupt, there are no more miner loans or collateral to be liquidated.”

Glassnode data, meanwhile, shows that the 30-day change in supply held by miners, while still decreasing, is cooling from recent highs, supporting the theory that sales are slowing.

“Fears of distressed bitcoin miners creating selling pressure are blown up,” Bitcoin mining analyst Jaran Mellerud added, responding to Hayes’ piece.

Bitcoin miner net position change chart. Source: Glassnode

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 sees worst monthly close in 2 years as traders watch $16.7K

BTC price action strengthens into the November monthly candle close, but traders are already warning over getting too “cocky” on Bitcoin.

Bitcoin (BTC) attempted to flip $17,000 to support on Dec. 1 after sealing its lowest monthly close in two years.

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

Bitcoin gains inch up as November end

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD circling $17,100 in a second intraday charge at higher levels.

The pair managed to avoid losses as the monthly candle closed, instead seeing solid daily gains of around 4.5% for Nov. 30.

Nonetheless, Bitcoin shed 16.2% for the month, making November 2022 its worst since 2019.

BTC/USD monthly returns chart (screenshot). Source: Coinglass

The more buoyant mood coincided with comments from the United States Federal Reserve. In a speech on inflation and the labor market, Chair Jerome Powell openly stated that smaller interest rate hikes could begin as soon as December.

“Monetary policy affects the economy and inflation with uncertain lags, and the full effects of our rapid tightening so far are yet to be felt,” he said:

“Thus, it makes sense to moderate the pace of our rate increases as we approach the level of restraint that will be sufficient to bring inflation down. The time for moderating the pace of rate increases may come as soon as the December meeting.”

Powell characteristically cautioned on heralding a full turning point in policy, something markets had been keenly awaiting throughout the year.

“Given our progress in tightening policy, the timing of that moderation is far less significant than the questions of how much further we will need to raise rates to control inflation, and the length of time it will be necessary to hold policy at a restrictive level,” he added.

Nonetheless, stocks reacted positively, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index ending the day up 3.1% and 4.4%, respectively, in line with Bitcoin.

No euphoria among traders

In responses of their own, meanwhile, crypto market commentators were equally cool on the immediate prospects despite the moderate month-end gains.

Related: Bitcoin capitulation 4th-worst ever as BTC hodlers lose $10B in a week

Crypto Tony warned that bulls were “getting cocky” into December and that now was not a suitable blind entry point.

“Now is not the time to go all in, thinking this is the bottom on Crypto,” he told Twitter followers:

“We have yet to see : – A macro higher high and higher low (Market structure trend change) – Bull volume coming in – Spot buys on the increase – Completed corrective structure.”

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

A key level to hold for continuation of the “bullish market structure,” he added, was $16,700.

Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, agreed on the importance of an area focused on $16,700 for his own strategy.

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 sees ‘double top’ before FOMC — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Concerns that Bitcoin may have already topped come as volatility is expected around the Fed rate hike decision and comments.

Bitcoin (BTC) begins a key week of internal and macroeconomic events still trading above $20,000.

After its highest weekly close since mid-September, BTC/USD remains tied to higher levels within a macro trading range.

The bulls have been keen to shift the trend entirely, while warnings from more conservative market participants continue to call for macro lows to enter next.

So far, a tug-of-war between the two parties is what has characterized BTC price action, and any internal or external triggers have only had a temporary effect. What could change that?

The first week of November contains a key event that has the potential to shape price behavior going forward — a decision by the United States Federal Reserve on interest rate hikes.

In addition to other macroeconomic data, this will form the backdrop to overall market sentiment beyond crypto.

Bitcoin will further see a monthly close during the week, this apt to spark last-minute volatility despite October 2022, being one of the quietest on record.

Cointelegraph takes a look at these and several other factors impacting BTC/USD in the coming days.

FOMC countdown enters final days

The headline story of the week comes courtesy of the Fed and the meeting of its Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).

On Nov. 1-2, officials will make a decision on the November benchmark interest rate hike, this overwhelmingly priced in at 0.75%.

While this will match the Fed’s previous two hikes in September and July, respectively, markets will be watching for something else — subtle hints of a change in quantitative tightening (QT).

The rates decision is due Wednesday at 2:00 pm EST, along with an accompanying statement and economic projections.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell will then deliver a speech at 2:30 pm EST, thus completing the backdrop to market reactions.

As Cointelegraph reported, there is already talk that subsequent rate hikes will begin to trend toward neutral, marking the end of an aggressive policy enacted almost a year ago.

For Bitcoin and risk assets in general, this could ultimately provide some serious fuel for growth as conditions loosen.

Looking at the short term, however, commentators expect a standard reaction to the upcoming FOMC announcement.

“Think we see a little pullback this week which is pretty typical when the FED will be announcing rates,” popular trading account IncomeSharks summarized to Twitter followers:

“4h showing a double top and downtrend break.”

An accompanying chart showed the expected retracement to be followed by more potential upside going forward.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: IncomeSharks/ Twitter

An alternative perspective came from analyst Kevin Svenson this weekend, who warned that with inflation expectations “increasing,” there was little reason to hope for a rate hike decrease in the near future.

“Every time the Stock Market rallied up in this current downtrend, it did so with the expectation of a FED pivot,” he noted:

“Inflation expectations increasing recently making a FED pivot less likely. The trend is ur friend? If so, Stocks find another lower high after FOMC.”

Svenson continued that should the Fed surprise with a lower hike than 0.75%, bullish momentum should “take over.”

“Obviously, this could be wrong if the FED does a ‘soft pivot’ and goes for 50 basis points,” he added:

“If that occurs, the market would get excited and bullish speculation would take over for the time being.”

According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, the chances of a lower hike than 0.75% are currently 19%.

Fed target rate probabilities chart. Source: CME Group

In a summary of the FOMC event, popular analyst Tedtalksmacro, meanwhile, drew similarities with Svenson’s take.

“There’s lots of talk about a ‘pivot’ or that ‘the Fed are breaking things and need to stop hiking.’ But, the data says otherwise and points to nothing other than hawkishness again this week,” it said.

“Clear double top” sparks BTC downside talk

Bitcoin managed to avoid major volatility as it closed the weekly candle at around $20,625 on Bitstamp, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView confirms.

That in itself was noteworthy, marking the highest weekly candle close in six weeks for BTC/USD.

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

The daily chart, meanwhile, retains the 100-day moving average as current resistance.

BTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp) with 100MA. Source: TradingView

Nonetheless, the long-established trading range the pair has acted in for months on end remains firmly in place, and even last week’s push higher failed to produce a significant paradigm shift.

For analyst Mark Cullen, it is thus a question of “wait and see” when it comes to Bitcoin’s next move.

In fresh analysis on Oct. 31, he noted BTC/USD had returned to a familiar Fibonacci level based on last week’s upside while continuing to range.

“Bitcoin pulled back to the 20.4k level at the 61.8 of the last push up & has held it so far,” he explained:

“With the FOMC meeting this week, i wonder if BTC just range between here & 21k until a catalyst pushes it in one direction or the other. Levels are clear, sit & wait.”

Tedtalksmacro drew a similar conclusion on macro markets in general — they expect the “same old hawkishness” from the Fed, and thus even FOMC delivering no surprises should be enough for last week’s bullish tone to continue.

“Nothing new is bullish — as the market seems prepared for all of the hawkishness that we have heard so far,” he concluded:

“Expect volatility this week and if everything goes smoothly, for a really, really hated rally.”

Crypto trader and analyst Il Capo of Crypto, meanwhile, called the two spikes above $21,000 in recent days a “clear double top” for Bitcoin.

His target of a reversion to the downside and new macro lows, possibly coming in at $14,000, remains in force.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Il Capo of Crypto/ Twitter

Too early to bottom

Comparisons between this year and 2018, Bitcoin’s last bear market, are abundant currently — but it may be a case of “too much, too soon.”

In an analysis released late last week, on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant argued that while Bitcoin is putting the pieces of the puzzle in place to bottom out, the market is not there yet.

“Similar to the bottoms in 2015 and 2018-2019, bitcoin prices have been trading in a narrow range (between $18,000 and $20,000 for almost two months),” it began:

“Price volatility has also dropped to one of its lowest levels ever and surged. When price volatility was this low in the past, it typically indicated that the downward trend was about to end. But in 2018, low price volatility was swiftly followed by a 50% price drop from $6.5k to $3.2k in just one month.”

CryptoQuant flagged two important on-chain metrics — MVRV and UTXO Realized Cap — supporting the theory that the next bear market bottom is still a way off.

MVRV divides Bitcoin’s market cap by realized cap and is “useful,” in the words of popular analyst Willy Woo, for detecting overbought oversold conditions, as well as macro tops and bottoms.

UTXO Realized Cap is the price at which different cohorts of Bitcoin were transferred compared to the prior time, giving an insight into profit and loss.

“MVRV and UTXO Realized Cap 6 months and older Age Bands show that the price of bitcoin is in the value range,” CryptoQuant continued:

“However, a reasonable length of time needs to pass before the 1-3 months UTXO Age Band Realized Price is overtaken for a prolonged growth trend. Currently, this level is at $21,264.”

As such, levels above $21,000 need to hold for the trend to change, and so far, that line in the sand has proven impossible to hold for hours, let alone weeks.

“We have seen that market bottoms can be correlated with unusually low volatility in bitcoin prices,” CryptoQuant concluded:

“Nevertheless, many of the on-chain measures we have examined still do not support the conclusion that the price has reached its bottom and is rising.”

Bitcoin UTXO Realized Cap annotated chart (screenshot). Source: CryptoQuant

Supply shock risk highest since 2017

Bitcoin dormant for up to a decade has been on the move recently, but overall, the BTC supply is becoming more and more illiquid.

Fresh data this week provides the latest hint that an increase in buyer interest could spark a considerable supply squeeze and associated price hike.

Highlighting data from on-chain analytics firm Coin Metrics, Jack Neureuter — a researcher at Fidelity Digital Assets — revealed that the percentage of the supply moved in the past year is now at an all-time low.

33.7% of all available BTC has left its wallet since the end of October 2021, this also accounts for the increased volumes around November’s $69,000 all-time high.

“Put another way, 2/3 of $BTC supply hasn’t moved the past 365 days,” Neureuter added in comments:

“Marginal trading drives prices over the short-term, but large imbalances between supply and demand tend to do so in the long-term.”

Bitcoin % supply last moved in past year chart. Source: Jack Neureuter/ Twitter

Separate data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, meanwhile, shows that the chances of a supply shock are rising.

Its Illiquid Supply Shock Ratio metric, which models the phenomenon, has been trending higher throughout 2022, and is currently at levels not seen since Bitcoin’s all-time high from the last halving cycle in 2017.

Bitcoin Illiquid Supply Shock chart. Source: Glassnode

Sentiment hits six-week highs with price

Perhaps unsurprisingly, crypto market sentiment has improved thanks to last week’s price increases.

Related: BNB jumps to new BTC all-time high as Elon Musk’s Twitter fuels DOGE bulls

In a sign of how much — or little — it takes to flip sentiment around, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index hit its highest levels in six weeks over the weekend.

Fear & Greed uses a basket of factors to determine how bullish or bearish the mood in crypto is and whether the market is due for a bounce or correction as a result.

At 34/100, sentiment even managed to escape the “extreme fear” zone, which has become commonplace in 2022.

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

Moreover, data from analytics firm Santiment suggested that long-term holders are planning to hodl through volatility.

“With Bitcoin back above $20.7k, traders appear to be content with long-term holding as coins continue moving away from exchanges,” it wrote in a tweet at the weekend.

Santiment additionally showed that the ratio of the BTC supply on exchanges was now at its lowest since 2018 — the year of the last macro bear market bottom.

“With the ratio of $BTC on exchanges down to 8.3%, it’s the lowest seen in 4 years. October has been a big outflow month,” the post stated.

Bitcoin exchange supply annotated chart. Source: Santiment/ Twitter

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