Bitcoin On The Move

 | Apr 30, 2020 12:37AM ET

There has been lots of chatter lately surrounding Bitcoin (BTC), with price yesterday rising almost 12.5% to an intraday high of $8,970. One reason is that in the coming weeks, Bitcoin will be “halving.” For simplicity sake, this means that every time 210,000 “blocks” are created by miners, the total number of Bitcoin are cut in half. This process is currently on pace to end in the year 2140, with a total of 21 million coins.

When the halving happens in mid-May, supply will decrease while the demand is expected to remain the same. Theoretically, this should drive up the price. Bitcoin has halved twice before, once in 2012 and the second time in 2016. After the 2016 halving, price eventually rose to its all-time highs near $19,666 (however not immediately) before pulling back to $5,920 less than 2 months later. The halving is based on a mathematical equation. Given the current rate at which Bitcoin are mined, the date of the halving is roughly known, so are people buying ahead of it?

On a weekly timeframe, price had broken lower out of a symmetrical triangle during the week of March 9th, which proved to be a false break lower. Today, price moved back into the triangle. Often times, when we see a false break in one direction out of a triangle, price will move to test the other side of the triangle, which in this case is near $10,500.