The price of bitcoin took a bit of a dip, though overall market sentiment remains bullish. Ether’s correlation to bitcoin is going up despite differences in value propositions.
- Bitcoin (BTC) trading around $19,077 as of 21:15 UTC (4:15 p.m. ET). Slipping 2.1% over the previous 24 hours.
- Bitcoin’s 24-hour range: $18,171-$19,920
- BTC above its 10-day and 50-day moving average, a bullish trending signal for market technicians.
The price of bitcoin was able to hit as high as $19,920, according to CoinDesk 20 data, before momentum stalled. Traders began hitting the sell button, taking the price to as low as $18,171 before it recovered. It was at $19,123.70 as of press time.
Katie Stockton, a technical analyst for Fairlead Strategies, sees $19,511 as a “resistance” level, a price point the world’s oldest cryptocurrency can break through in this time of highly bullish sentiment. “An eventual breakout appears likely from a momentum perspective,” she said, noting that $19,511 “is not a strong resistance level – $20,000 is a psychological hurdle, much like Dow 30,000.”
As for equities, Tuesday was green across major market indexes.
- Asia’s Nikkei 225 ended the day up 1.3% as traders expressed optimism a vaccine from several drug manufacturers will hit the market in the near term.
- The FTSE 100 in Europe was on the plus side by 1.9% as retail stocks boosted the index on news a few major retail chains may dissolve, with potential survivors making gains.
- In the United States the S&P climbed 1.1% as optimism regarding potential economic stimulus helped to bolster the index.
A positive performance out of stocks often means bitcoin’s price will trend upward, but Tuesday’s sideways activity again reiterates how volatile the crypto markets can be. In turn, that raises questions about a major narrative regarding bitcoin’s role.
“Expect additional short-term volatility, although intermediate- and long-term momentum are strongly positive,” Fairlead’s Stockton said. Thus, when looking at bitcoin’s volatility versus popular traditional assets, the store of value thesis may not be as strong as many believe as volatility is trending up versus other investments.
However, the narrative that bitcoin serves an important purpose in uncertain times still holds for a large swath of the market.
“It is being used as a hedge against inflation that will come from global monetary easing as a result of COVID-19,” said Midori Kanemitsu, a market analyst at cryptocurrency exchange bitFlyer.
Some of this increased volatility may simply be because investors are participating in profit-taking at these lofty levels, said Andrew Tu, an executive for quant trading firm Efficient Frontier. “Currently, there is less stablecoin inflow into exchanges and more bitcoin inflow into exchanges, which suggests less buying pressure for bitcoin for the very near future,” Tu told CoinDesk.
Analysts are also keeping an eye on ether. The all-time high for the native currency of the Ethereum network is over $1,400 and many think the cryptocurrency is a good buy in this bull market.
“I think ETH is still undervalued versus BTC,” noted George Clayton, managing partner of investment firm Cryptanalysis Capital. “All this DeFi (decentralized finance) going on is showing the utility of smart contract protocols.”
Is bitcoin leading ether?
Ether (ETH), the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, was down Tuesday, trading around $596 and slipping 2% in 24 hours as of 21:15 UTC (4:15 p.m. ET).
Over the past several days, ether has mirrored bitcoin’s price rise closely.
The correlation between bitcoin and ether is also trending upward, though is lower than it was after the March market meltdown.
The fact the two cryptocurrencies are increasingly trading in tandem belies the fact that Ethereum’s 2.0 Beacon Chain launch clearly differentiates some of its use case aspects. While bitcoin’s “store of value” narrative continues to be a strong signal coming from industry analysts, the “programmable money” thesis of Ethereum doesn’t seem to be making the market asset perform based on its own fundamentals – yet.
“Both assets have definitely seen a [U.S. dollar]-priced upswing, and though BTC has been the one to have a lot of recent news around its proximity to all time highs, Ethereum has been the real star of the summer of DeFi and into the fall compared to BTC,” noted John Willock, chief executive officer of crypto custody provider Tritium. “I believe that as confidence in 2.0 with some operating history and broader investor understanding of the economic implications to the valuation of ETH spreads, we will see a bull run in ETH,” he added.
Other markets
Digital assets on the CoinDesk 20 are mostly red Tuesday. One notable winner as of 21:15 UTC (4:15 p.m. ET):
- litecoin (LTC) + 1.4%
Notable losers:
- ethereum classic (ETC) - 6.7%
- cardano (ADA) - 6.5%
- stellar (XLM) - 6.2%
Commodities:
- Oil was down 1.1%. Price per barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude: $44.54.
- Gold was in the green 2.1% and at $1,814 as of press time.
Treasurys:
- The 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yield climbed Wednesday jumping to 0.929 and in the green 11.8%.