- Bitcoin's three-week consolidation below $38,000 has a bullish undertone of shallow price dips, a positive sign, one observer said.
- Seasonality is supportive of continued gains in bitcoin's price in December.
Bitcoin's [BTC] price rally has stalled since Nov. 9, with $38,000 proving a tough nut to crack. That does not necessarily mean the uptrend is over.
In fact, a closer look at how prices have behaved during the consolidation suggests it isn't.
While the gains have been capped closer to $38,000, the subsequent pullbacks have been shallow and short-lived, a sign of persistent "buy-the-dip" demand within the price consolidation. The horizontal upper bound of resistance and rising lower bound from shallow dips can be identified as an ascending triangle formation on the price chart.
In other words, bitcoin could be building energy for the next leg higher.
"Bitcoin bounces around in an ascending channel, hitting its three-week upper resistance of $37.8K on Wednesday evening. An intensifying sell-off thwarts attempts to heat the price, but the pullbacks have become less deep over the past three weeks, suggesting the building up of bullish sentiment," Alex Kuptsikevich, a senior market analyst at FxPro, said in an email.
Ascending triangles mostly end with a bullish breakout, extending the preceding uptrend, according to chartered market technician Charles D. Kirkpatrick II and technical analyst Julie R. Dahlquist's book "Technical Analysis: The Complete Resource for Financial Market Technicians 3rd Edition." The book focuses on traditional markets.
"Upward breakouts occur 77% of the time, and breakouts happen roughly 61% of the distance (time) from the base to the cradle," Kirkpatrick II and Dahlquist say in the book while warning of the potential for failed breakouts. A fake breakout happens when prices move beyond the resistance, only to fall back into the pattern quickly, trapping buyers on the wrong side of the market.
Kuptsikevich sees bitcoin rising above $40,000 on a potential ascending triangle breakout. According to Markus Thielen, head of research and strategy at crypto services provider Matrixport, a breakout could see bitcoin potentially targeting $45,000.
Data tracked by pseudonymous market analyst Skew show unwinding of short perpetual futures positions on Bybit and a renewed interest in bullish bets on Binance. Unwinding of shorts or bets on a price drop often puts an upward pressure on prices.
Perhaps, the long-held resistance near $38,000 could soon come into play.
$BTC Binance & Bybit Open Interest / Delta
— Skew Δ (@52kskew) November 24, 2023
Large long opening on binance futures here & large short puked on bybit perps
Perp CVD & Delta
Perp driven price action here clearly from OI & change in perp delta
~ driven by big long opening & short puking in the same timeframe pic.twitter.com/CHs8LGwKjj
Seasonal trends favor a continued higher move in cryptocurrency. Bitcoin's average gain in December over the last eight years has been 12%, according to data tracked by Matrixport.
"Seasonality appears to be working again. The average return in December of +12% is respectable and could lift Bitcoin to $42,000 — by this metric alone," Thielen said in a note to clients Thursday.