- Bitcoin falls below the lower range of its Bollinger Bands.
- A retracement higher may target its 20-day moving average.
Bitcoin’s price broke below its lower range of a widely watched technical indicator on Monday, a day before the Federal Reserve began its latest two-day, monetary policy meeting. Whether the two events represent anything other than a mild coincidence is another story.
The U.S. central bank will likely raise interest rates 25 basis points (bps) on Wednesday.
Anyone following crypto markets has likely noticed bitcoin’s diminished reaction to macroeconomic events. The two most recent rate hikes in May and March resulted in relatively mild price moves of 1.13% and -2.87%. The reaction to recent inflation and GDP data was similar, with BTC moving just -0.74% and 1.16% respectively, following each occurrence..
All told, crypto markets have likely priced in tomorrow’s anticipated move.
More interesting for traders is BTC’s price declining below the lower range of its Bollinger Bands, an indication that its price may be set to move higher – albeit just slightly. Bollinger Bands are a technical indicator that tracks an asset’s 20-day moving average, and plots price levels two standard deviations above and below the average.
As an asset’s price is expected to stay within two standard deviations of its average, 95% of the time, a breach of the external bands is seen as statistically significant.
For BTC, traders may be eyeing an upside target of $30,000 level, which coincides with bitcoin’s 20-day moving average. A high volume area of activity is also in place at $30,000, implying that a healthy dose of price agreement exists at this level. Prices tend to move slowly in periods of high volume, implying that BTC is poised to increase slightly, but will run into overhead resistance following an advance.
And given recent decreased volatility, and a narrowing trading range, that leaves just 3% upside between current prices and the 20-day average.
The aggregate spread between current BTC prices and its 20-day average is approximately $900, outside bitcoin’s current average true range (ATR) of $737. The implication is that even a 3% price increase to its 20-day average would mildly increase bitcoin volatility.
On-chain data does not suggest that prices will move sharply. According to analytics firm Glassnode, large crypto investors have continued to move their bitcoin from centralized exchanges.
While the trend may partly reflect a lack of confidence in centralized exchanges, bitcoin wallet balances have stayed fairly stable for both large and small investors, underscoring the current penchant for hodling and confidence in the asset.
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