Bitcoin Rests After Drop, Tests Buy-The-Dip Narrative

 | Apr 22, 2021 01:16AM ET

Bitcoin needs to recoup bullish strength to break above $60,000 again.

h2 Key Takeaways/h2
  • On-chain indicators point to buy-the-dip action from high volume investors during Bitcoin's weekend dip.
  • However, there appears to be considerable resistance to bulls from a technical and fundamental point of view.
  • Mainstream adoption, combined with institutional inflows, could help Bitcoin prices stay strong.

The cryptocurrency market has resumed its rally after a weekend shakeout that saw more than $10 billion in liquidations. More patient traders are testing the validity of buy-the-dip action.

h2 Various Factors Influenced Crash/h2

As the drop comes after 1000% gains in one year, fear around a generational market top is palpable.

At least three factors influenced the cryptocurrency sell-off: possible insider selling by Coinbase executives, a decline in Bitcoin’s mining hash rate, and the U.S. Treasury’s decision to charge 32 Russian entities for election interference via crypto-related transactions.

Prior to the crash, Bitcoin reached its peak price ($65,000) when Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN) listed its stock on Apr. 14. This could be considered a “buy the rumor, sell the news” event.

A post mortem of the crash revealed a significant inflow of over 9000 BTC to Binance before the crash. Then, cascading futures liquidations forced traders to sell positions, leading to the crash.

On-chain expert Willy Woo later found that 20,700 BTC moved out of the exchange after the move, suggesting a strong whale buying action. He tweeted that Bitcoin “continues to move to very strong holders” based on the liquidity drops in its supply.