Investors Largely Turning to History-Based Bitcoin (BTC) Price Action to Predict Future
Lately, there has been a significant amount of talk in the cryptocurrency industry regarding whether or not BTC will start a fresh uptrend based on fundamental price action, or based on news-driven price action.
Throughout 2018, many investors saw the potential approval of a Bitcoin ETF as one such event that would help Bitcoin fundamentally and lead to an influx of positive news that would allow Bitcoin’s price to start a new upwards price cycle.This hope was crushed, however, earlier this week when it was announced that Cboe had withdrawn the VanEck-SolidX Bitcoin ETF application, which will likely lead to significant delays until they reintroduce this application to US regulatory authroities.
Now, investors are largely turning to theories regarding history-based price cycles to predict where the markets will head next.Analyst: New Bitcoin (BTC) All-Time-Highs Take Longer with Each Cycle
Josh Rager, a popular cryptocurrency analyst on Twitter, recently noted that BTC takes longer to set new all-time-highs with each price cycle, which could mean that if Bitcoin follows its historical trends, it may not break above $20,000 until March of 2021 or later. “When will Bitcoin break its previous All-Time High? It took 1,181 days for BTC to break its previous ATH and 1,478 days to peak at new ATH in Dec ’17… At this rate, $BTC would break previous ATH +$20k in March 2021 or later… New Bitcoin ATHs seem to take longer with each cycle,” Rager explained. //twitter.com/josh_rager/status/12537088?s=21 It is important to note that the basis of this theory assumes that the massive volatility BTC saw in 2017 and 2018 did not have a fundamental impact on future price action, and that there will not be any major news that impacts BTC’s price action.Bitcoin is extremely close to breaking its record for its longest-ever correction, which may provide further support for the theory regarding fresh all-time-high cycles taking longer with each new pricing cycle.
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