Yesterday, the price of Bitcoin briefly passed over $10,000–shooting up from roughly $9,700 to around $10,120 over the course of several hours, in the first stage of what turned out to be a nearly perfect ‘Bar pattern,’’
As by user ‘JamesRKaye’ in a post on Trading View, a Bart pattern is “characterized by its sudden rise in price, sideways movement, then sudden drop,” forming a line that resembles the hairline of Homer Simpson’s only son.
However, before the latter half of the pattern was formed, Bitcoin enthusiasts across Twitter started making their predictions that this time–surely this time–would be the end of Bitcoin below $10k forever.
“I don’t usually make predictions. But this is too obvious not to call. We will never see Bitcoin below $10k again,” wrote Twitter user @hodlonaut around 10.30 CEST on June 2nd.
I don’t usually make predictions.
But this is too obvious not to call.
We will never see Bitcoin below $10k again.
— hodlonaut 🌮⚡🔑 (@hodlonaut)
Not quite as bullish, Mati Greenspan, market analyst and founder of Quantum Economics, also tweeted that “this MIGHT be your last chance to buy Bitcoin under $10k.”
This MIGHT be your last chance to buy Bitcoin under $10k. 🔥🚀🌛
— Mati Greenspan (tweets are not trading advice) (@MatiGreenspan)
(It wasn’t.)
$10k is still a sticking point for BTC
Still, BTC’s brief and most recent foray over the $10,000 mark and back again begs the question: why does this keep happening?
Indeed, Bitcoin has been on ; however, each time Bitcoin does make it over the $10,000 mark, a similar pattern of events seems to follow: there’s a bit of hullabaloo about how this time is the time that Bitcoin will stay over $10k, and then Bitcoin falls back under $10k (where it stays for weeks, or even months.)
Going to make a prediction and say that we will see Bitcoin below $10k again.
— Charles (@CryptoCharles__)
Alex Mashinsky, founder and chief executive of Celsius Network, told Finance Magnates that this pattern of rising and falling around the $10k mark is par for the course–we could be in for a longer period of false starts: “I flagged several times [that] we will ‘kiss’ $10k and go back,” he said.
However, Mashinsky said that in the greater scheme of things, the crypto world has never had such polarized views about where Bitcoin is headed next: “in the past four years, I have [never] seen more contradicting views betting all they have with such conviction [than now],” he said. “At Celsius, we see record borrowing of both dollars to go long and BTC to go short, as the bulls and the bears battle it out.”
Did political unrest briefly drive the price of Bitcoin past $10,000?
What drove Bitcoin past $10k this time around?
With the coronavirus pandemic still keeping nations in quarantine and protests raging in Hong Kong and the United States, geopolitical unrest has certainly had a major effect on financial markets over the past several months; some have argued that as this unrest grows, more and more people will turn to Bitcoin as a way to protect their assets from possible economic crises and hyperinflation.
However, there is little evidence to show that the world’s major fiat currencies–the USD, in particular–will enter crisis mode anytime soon; and thereby, little evidence that people will be buying Bitcoin en masse as a result of the political unrest in America or elsewhere in the world (in spite of what might think.)
Christ
— Jessica Huseman (@JessicaHuseman)
In fact, in the most economically perilous moments of the coronavirus fallout, the USD was temporarily driven to highs that haven’t been seen in several years as a result of the effects of the coronavirus, though it seems to be returning to pre-corona levels.
Still, fear of possible economic chaos is a strong motivator. , told Finance Magnates that “news of riots and possible curfew in major cities [have] convinced many to buy coins.”
“Some argue the environment reminds the market that BTC can act as a hedge against excessive government influence. As equities are near pre-shelter-in-place levels, many seem to view crypto as .”
BTC hodlers hope to profit off of short-term BTC gains during times of political unrest
And even if the political unrest isn’t a strong motivating factor for buying coins in and of itself, the belief that more people will be buying coins as a result of the protests can be a powerful incentivizing force for investors hoping to profit off of short-term gains.
Similarly, this time around, the number of searches for “Bitcoin protests” has risen significantly in the last week.
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Collin Plume, chief executive and founder of Noble Gold Investments, told Finance Magnates that many investors still see Bitcoin as a place to make fast income, and as economic and political unrest continues, the need for ‘quick’ income increases: therefore, he believes that Investors’ short term interest in the currency causes the rapid increase and decline in its cost: “when you have something that can move so quickly and the return can be so high for a short period of time, people sell,” he said.
Regardless of whether the protests in America or elsewhere in the world are having any kind of direct effect on the price of BTC, Alex Mashinsky pointed out that the role that news plays in Bitcoin prices should not be underestimated.
Any news–good or bad–moves the whole market in an exaggerated way,” Mashinsky said. For example, in addition to the riots in America, “recently, spooked the longs.”
$10k could be a “psychological barrier” for crypto investors
However, if the unrest in America was indeed the primary reason for the short push past $10k, why couldn’t Bitcoin sustain the move past $10k this time?
Collin Plume told Finance Magnates that in the greater scheme of things, one of the factors keeping BTC under $10k could have to do with investor psychology.
Indeed, “the $10,000 mark is” Plume told Finance Magnates.
The number 10,000 has also been observed as a psychological barrier in other financial markets as well.
Indeed, in an for Business Insider, CNBC Senior Editor John Carney wrote of “The Curse Of Dow 10,000”. This phenomenon describes the way that from 1999-2003, every time the Dow seemed to have reached the 10,000 level, it would “succumb to a bear market and fall below it every time.”
While it’s possible that something about the way that ‘$10,000’–a “big round number”–looks on the page could be somehow intimidating to investors, the curse of 10,000 seems to have more to do with $10,000 being a marker at which BTC (and other financial markets) tend to have stalled out in the past.
“If the markets have in the past displayed a tendency to pull back at a certain level, rational investors can anticipate this and begin selling at that level,” Carney wrote.
Therefore, if $10,000 seems to be the place where BTC has stalled out before, then investors may plan to sell once $10,000 is reached in order to avoid a loss; this could be the reason that Bitcoin seems to dance around the 10,000-mark before falling back down.
Carney called these investors ‘psychological arbitrageurs’, or ‘Psych Arbs’: these traders “[reinforce] what otherwise might be an irrational market behavior, as the traders try to make money by betting that the market will gyrate when it hits key psychological points.”
What’s next?
Still, while the tendency to get stuck around $10,000 may be frustrating, Mashinsky argues that it could be good for the industry in the longer term: that every time BTC hits $10k, more traders and miners could enter into the Bitcoin ecosystem for the first time.
“When BTC spikes to recent highs (like $10,500) it gives a good entry point to shorts and mining guys who want to lock in gains,” he said.
Therefore, eventually, “we will break the $10k levels”–but this is only the first in a long line of upward movements.
“Then we need to get through $12k and $14k, which represent further resistance. After that, we are good to test new highs,” he said, adding that he believes that “it will come faster than anyone thinks, as violence and anarchy escalates with over 40 million Americans out of a job.”
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