Cryptocurrency

Bitcoin (BTC) remains bullish but has “one more leg down” to complete before a resurgence, one trader argues.

In analysis on Nov. 10, popular Twitter account Crypto Ed said that the pullback from this week’s all-time highs above $68,500 was turning out to be deeper than anticipated.

Target $65,000 for Bitc

“Going a bit deeper as I was expecting yesterday. Looks like it will do 1 more leg down to complete that ABC,” he said alongside a forecast price trajectory chart.

“Lines up with 2nd chart: taking out those lows and retest support. When bounce, going for 70k.”

BTC/USD could thus fall as low as $65,000 in the short term, marking retention of April’s old highs as support. 

Others framed Monday’s record as a record slump for the U.S. dollar against Bitcoin, among them longtime trader Peter Brandt.

“$1 when I was born is worth 8 cents today. $1 today will likely to be worthless when my grand kids are my age,” part of a Twitter post read Wednesday.

BTC/USD circled $66,800 at the time of writing, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed, having bounced at $66,250 hours previously.

Consolidation takes hold of major cryptocurrencies

Altcoins meanwhile copied Bitcoin in its modest comedown, with Ether (ETH) also correcting from all-time highs.

Related: Kraken predicts $96K BTC price top as analyst says $1T Bitcoin market cap is ‘now cemented’

None of the top ten cryptocurrencies by market cap showed positive performance over the past 24 hours.

The rout seemed to be fuelled by Tesla stock, which experienced a sudden 12% sell-off shortly after the start of trading Tuesday.

The destination of CEO Elon Musk’s 10% stock sale worth $23 billion also remained a topic of debate, amid hopes that Bitcoin would see a fresh commitment from the world’s richest man.

Articles You May Like

A stronger tone to kick off 2025; mutual funds see outflows
Washington, D.C., revenue estimate boosted
Higher yields create ‘better-than-typical’ entry point for January reinvestment capital
Musk examines how to oust Starmer as UK prime minister before next election
UK 10-year borrowing costs hit highest level since 2008