- Bitcoin is consolidating sideways in a $1,500-wide trading range since the beginning of May 2020.
- While observers anticipate the cryptocurrency to head lower, a fractal from 2019 shows a different picture.
- So it seems, bitcoin is currently mirroring the same trend pattern that sent its price to $14,000 last year.
After rallying by more than 150 percent from its March 2020 lows, Bitcoin’s upside bias has paused inside a strict trading range.
The benchmark cryptocurrency has repeatedly tested $10,000-10,500 zone as its short-term resistance. Meanwhile, it has located moderately strong support above $8,600. Since May 2, 2020, bitcoin is consolidating sideways in the range defined by the said two levels.Bitcoin BTCUSD daily chart.The bitcoin chart is showing an interim bias conflict, with traders unable to define a trend above $10,000 or below $8,600. Nevertheless, a poll conducted by prominent analyst Josh Rager that about 55 percent of traders see Bitcoin moving downwards from its current position.
The Bullish Bitcoin Fractal
TradingShot showed Bitcoin mirroring moves of a 2019 fractal – the same that sent its price up towards $14,000.
The fractal consists of a sequence of Bitcoin’s consolidation and rallies. For instance, ‘Sequence 1’ in the chart below shows the cryptocurrency trending sideways between March 2019 and April 2019. The consolidation ends as the price breaks out to the upside – from circa $5,000 to near $9,000.Bitcoin BTCUSD daily chart.In Sequence 2, one can notice Bitcoin practically repeating the exact price trend from 2019. A jump followed by a small period of consolidation that leads to another sideways action. Meanwhile, the RSI is also mirroring the old pattern.
“What followed in June 2019 after the last consolidation was one last rise to the (blow-off) top of June 26, 2019,” explained TradingShot. “So it will not be far-fetched if we get another rise now after the current consolidation is over.”