Amid a week of significant cryptocurrency volatility, Bitcoin price has been a point of focus, especially after dipping below $43,200 today. After rising to $44,533 on Tuesday, the price has since entered an ascending channel, hitting a local low of $42,835 on Thursday.
This trend has sparked a critical debate: is this a sign of an impending major correction following Bitcoin’s 65% rise in the past seven weeks, or is it a temporary bear trap in a persistently bullish market? Adam Cochran, partner at CEHV, provided an in-depth explanation analysis of the current Bitcoin market situation.
Bitcoin Price Poised for Further Downside?
Through But this decline caused too many people to go from ‘wgmi’ to ‘taking money off the table’. In true euphoria, people simply cheer every dip. This looks healthy and bullish.”
This observation indicates that the market’s reaction to the price drop is not indicative of the ‘euphoria’ typically observed before a major market correction, indicating more stable and bullish sentiment. Furthermore, Cochran delved into the intricacies of the futures market, noting the increase in Open Interest (OI) on the Bitcoin side and the decreased basis, signifying a move towards market equilibrium.
He explained: “On the BTC side, OI has increased while basis has decreased, meaning the market has moved a bit more toward equilibrium on futures.” This is an important indicator of the health of the market.
Cochran also examined the relationship between perpetual futures prices and spot prices. He noted: “We also have a perpetual futures price that is trading slightly above the spot rate, which we would expect, and it is not overly optimistic – which is healthy.” This indicates a cautiously optimistic market, avoiding the extremes of pessimism or irrational exuberance.
In his analysis, the crypto analyst also highlighted the potential impact of Spot Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) on the market. He claimed: “Bitcoin is limited. Bitcoin futures are not. Ultimately, 1 BTC > 1 BTC is Perp.” This underlines the importance of Bitcoin’s finite nature compared to the more flexible futures market. The introduction of ETFs, which are required to buy spot Bitcoin, could significantly impact market liquidity and dynamics.
The important thing is what’s missing
Cochran claims that the pre-rally started with healthy buying between the $16,000 and $18,000 support, before the rally was fueled by “bears being destroyed” and expanded by renewed spot buying as previous buyers did not distribute their coins.
“But the most important thing is really what’s missing,” said Cochran, who added: “ETF buyers haven’t started buying yet. Retail buyers haven’t started buying yet. BTC failed to break below the $42,000 support. BTC, an asset worth nearly $1 trillion, is up 157% this year, and the retail inflows haven’t even started yet.”
These observations indicate that the Bitcoin rally potentially has a lot more fuel in the tank. Cochran concluded:
Picture this: Next year, Boomers will sit down with their financial planner. They are looking at their 60/40 portfolio with a 5 year performance of 5%. They just read that Bitcoin is up 157% year over year approaching ATHs. Why wouldn’t they diversify 1% into this new BTC ETF? […] I suspect that even at this level, any spot purchase will be deep in the money this time next year.
However, in the short term, one thing is crucial: BTC price must break out of the rising trend channel on the lower time frames to trigger new upward momentum.
Featured image from iStock, chart from TradingView.com