Bitcoin price is once again falling, and already there are extremely bearish price targets ranging from former bear market support at $6,000, to under $5,000, to a double bottom, and potentially all the way down at $1,000 per BTC.
When the market gets this exuberant, it’s often the time for reversal, much like the calls for $10o,000 Bitcoin at the recent rally top were commonplace. One crypto analyst believes a bounce could be coming sooner than expected if a massive hidden bullish divergence on Bitcoin price charts plays out in the days ahead.Bitcoin Price: Hidden Bullish Divergence Could Signal a Return to Bull
With Bitcoin price recently consolidating within a symmetrical or descending triangle, a break in either direction was certain to happen. However, Bitcoin price crashed despite most of the market expecting Bitcoin to break upward and continue on its bull trend into a full-blown bull run.
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While it’s caused even the most bullish crypto analyst to turn bearish and call for downside targets at outrageous lows, one crypto analyst that was bullish before the breakdown remains confident and has even spotted an extremely bullish signal on Bitcoin price charts that could indicate a rebound is coming soon.
Weekly $7,440 is an important level for me. Key support, and any price action above this would result in significant hidden bullish divergence with RSI on this time frame. Will be watching this area if we continue down. — The Wolf Of All Streets (@scottmelker)
Weekly Price is currently sitting on the 50 EMA on the weekly chart. Price has been above this line since April, on the break up from the low 5ks. — The Wolf Of All Streets (@scottmelker)
Related Reading | Bitcoin Price Crash May Be Final Test Before Market Goes Full Bull
Bitcoin price rose as much as over 300% this year so far, meaning there are still many crypto traders in profit who could be looking to sell or close in the profit that is left. The further Bitcoin falls, more long positions that thought they were safe could also be stopped out, causing a cascading effect or a “long squeeze.”