Spot BTC/USD exchange rate was down 3.84 percent at $8,360.87 ahead of the New York morning session open. At the same time, bitcoin futures listed on CME fell by more than 6 percent. to $8,385.
Getting towards the area, which is basically the high from 8 January. Given that everybody wants to long $8,200-8,250, I doubt we'll reach it, if we are bullish. S/R flip of this area would be good. Main goal; breaking back above $8,500 to flip that area. — Michaël van de Poppe (@CryptoMichNL)
The downside move followed bitcoin’s massive price rally at the beginning of this year. As of January 13, the cryptocurrency had jumped by 43 percent from its local bottom of $6,430, established in December last year. Part of those gains came after an escalation in US-Iran tensions raised investors’ appetite for haven assets.
Bitcoin climbed to its near-two-month peak of $9,194.99 on January 13 but failed to move any further as the said geopolitical tensions cooled off. Investors preferred to book profits, which resulted in the bearish correction that is currently in play.Global Sentiment Cautious
Bitcoin’s dip also came at the time when investors were awaiting the . The bank left its policy unchanged, putting a hold on rate cuts after noticing stabilization in growth in Eurozone, as well as overseas after the phase one deal agreement between the US and China.The cautious sentiment helped Gold in limiting its decline as investors remained half-dipped in safe-haven assets. Bitcoin, whose correlation to Gold increased since the beginning of the US-Iran crisis, also observed technical supports to safeguard its bullish bias.
Bitcoin Price Action Ahead
The BTC/USD exchange rate now looks biased to retest support at circa $8,200-$8,300, a range it observed as resistance during the May-June trade session last year. Nevertheless, the absence of interim fundamentals supports an extensive fall towards $7,800, which coincides with bitcoin’s 200-weekly moving average wave (blacked).