Bitcoin (BTC) is back at $57,000 as a new week begins after a late surge produced a much better weekly close than many expected.
Making up for last week’s Coronavirus-induced sell-off and associated price dip, Bitcoin passed $58,000 overnight before consolidating higher, still up around 5.7% on the day.
The outlook could hold many a surprise — Coronavirus nerves remain, as macro markets hint before the open, and sellers still have the option of taking advantage of leveraged optimists on the back of the latest gains.
With everything to play and the monthly close due in under 48 hours, Cointelegraph takes a look at the numbers to see what could shape Bitcoin price performance this week.
Bitcoin bounces back in record time
Just three days after losing $6,000 in a single daily candle, BTC price action is already back from the brink.
In a classic end to the weekend, BTC/USD rose to produce a weekly close of $57,300 on Bitstamp — thus avoiding its lowest such weekly end price in two months.
The gains have since stuck, with $57,000 still the focus at the time of writing Monday.
In fresh analysis, popular trader and analyst Rekt Capital noted that the 21-week exponential moving average (EMA) at $52,500 had provided support as a “time-tested bull market indicator.”
“Strong BTC reaction from the 21-week EMA area,” he summarized.
Despite local highs of $58,300, however, Bitcoin has yet to deliver a definitive breakout, as major resistance at $60,000 remains untouched.
All previous attempts to crack that selling zone since losing it as support have ended in a firm rejection.
BTC 4hr (linear):
Parallel cannel pic.twitter.com/pqrEfHQoHr
— Nunya Bizniz (@Pladizow) November 29, 2021
The uptick nonetheless caught some by surprise, data shows, with liquidations nearing $300 million over the past 24 hours.
Funding rates, which on Sunday were neutral, are meanwhile also climbing, signalling the return of optimism over a reliable BTC price rebound — and the risk that implies.
“All it took was a +7% Daily candle to dissolve all fears and worries of a new BTC Bear Market,” Rekt Capital added.
BTC/USD, he said, is “progressing favorably” when it comes to the monthly close due at the end of Tuesday.
Coronavirus and a March 2020 replay
Macro markets are expecting a turbulent start to the week as the new Coronavirus variant, omicron, continues to bite into sentiment.
“We really need some more answers to figure out the impact on growth,” Priya Misra, global head of rates strategy at TD Securities, told Bloomberg Monday.
“Risk assets are pricing in uncertainty.”
Last week was characterized by major volatility across the board as Bitcoin and altcoins followed stocks, oil and others in a blitz sell-off.
Asian markets look set to continue the trend on Monday’s open, with 1-2% drops slated at the time of writing.
With Bitcoin on the rise, any further jolts to macro structures may yet halt the newfound optimism.
Bulls are hoping that the scenario will play out in a similar fashion to March 2020, when a cross-crypto rout as Coronavirus entered the world stage subsequently sparked a surge which eclipsed previous price highs.
many seem scared of another march 2020 style bitcoin liquidation event, if you hold your own keys and don’t use leverage this is a negligible concern, if it does happen I expect it to be quick and brutal then correct, most trying to trade this will get rekt, stay humble and stack
— ODELL (@ODELL) November 28, 2021
Nonetheless, Bitcoin did not escape unscathed last week, as some familiar faces lined up to pour scorn on what they claim is by no means an escape from risk.
“Being less risky doesn’t make Bitcoin safe,” gold bug Peter Schiff argued Friday, forecasting that Bitcoin would ultimately become “as risky as any altcoin.”
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