Bitcoin (BTC) passed $20,400 for the first time this month on Sept. 2 as United States economic data outperformed expectations.
Declining dollar accompanies BTC price rebound
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD approaching $20,500 after the Wall Street open, marking new highs for September.
The pair had responded well to U.S. non-farm payroll data, which in August showed inflows dropping less than expected.
A further boost came from news that the G7 had agreed to implement a price cap on Russian oil, with the European Union also planning to target the country’s gas imports.
While the S&P500 and Nasdaq Composite Index both added 1.25% after the first hour’s trading, the U.S. dollar conversely fell in step, looking set to dive below 109 at the time of writing.
Bitcoin thus inched closer to an area around $20,700, already being eyed as a launchpad for a short squeeze — a liquidation of short positions providing a swift spike higher for spot price.
In a tweet on the day, popular trading account Daan Crypto Trades showed that a low-liquidity area remained overhead, likely not providing much resistance.
“White area is quite thin in terms of recent volume profile,” part of commentary on an accompanying chart read.
“Should move through that area with relative ease.”
$BTC White area is quite thin in terms of recent volume profile.
Should move through that area with relative ease.
Needs some spot bid to support price of course or we’ll get those wicks taking out stops and reversing pic.twitter.com/hRX2Z1Ww2h
— Daan Crypto Trades (@DaanCrypto) September 2, 2022
Summarizing the short-term plan in his latest YouTube update, meanwhile, fellow trader Crypto Ed painted a target at near $20,700.
“Extreme capitulation” is here, say multiple metrics
Looking at the longer-term perspective, two analysts meanwhile insisted there was reason to stay bullish on current price action.
Related: The total crypto market cap continues to crumble as the dollar index hits a 20 year high
Twitter trader Alan noted similarities to the 2015 bear market, and argued that if history were to repeat, BTC/USD should be about to bottom out.
Historically, one of the bear markets in $BTC was completed by two big bear flags.
The current chart pattern is very similar.
Breakdown of the 2nd bear flag was the last step just before a massive bull run in 2015.
What if?
RT and FOLLOW appreciated #Bitcoin #BTC #Cryptos pic.twitter.com/2ivFqKBgkM
— Trader Tardigrade (@TATrader_Alan) September 2, 2022
Popular account Plan C contrasted realized losses in USD with Bitcoin’s market cap to produce an index of “extreme capitulation.”
The result concluded that only at the pit of Bitcoin’s 2018 bear market was capitulation stronger than at present.
#BTC Extreme Network Capitulation
>1.0 for ONLY the second time in the last 10 years. #Bitcoin #Crypto pic.twitter.com/xn596ZZuqT
— Plan©️ (@TheRealPlanC) September 2, 2022
A series of further on-chain indicator posts from Plan C on the day furthered the concept that current market behavior was echoing macro bear market bottoms.
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