Chart Of The Day: Want To Trade Bitcoin's Trend? Name Your Terms

 | Feb 07, 2018 10:01AM ET

More and more banks have banned consumers from purchasing Bitcoin with their credit cards. This has led to the last leg of the selloff this month, from $10,000 and lower. This last leg followed what some consider to be a concerted effort by global regulators to squelch the little retail investor's most recent stand against the system, and what others consider an attempt to avoid another forex/binary option scandal. Whichever way you see it, the continued regulations have helped bring the number one cryptocurrency by market cap down from $20,000 to $10,000 and yet lower.

Either way, the leading cryptocurrency is rising today, for a second day, leaving traders questioning whether the selloff is over.

h3 So Is The Selloff Over?/h3

First, the last leg in the selloff proved to be a blessing in disguise for the Bitcoin market, if not for those individuals who lost their pants (and to them, our sympathies). The selloff was of course due in part to the reduced demand of credit card purchases, but much more likely it was a result of banks highlighting the risk of a digital asset whose chaotic swings invalidate any assumption that it is a currency.

We warned our readers about these risks, specifically because of these very credit card purchases.

Did these guys really not get that this was risky? Trust me, the market is better off without unskilled traders putting their hopes and dreams of risk-free, quick riches into it, thereby destroying the hopes and dreams of responsible traders. This crash was a shake up, keeping us honest and reminding everyone that there are no free rides.

Second, even if we're left with only responsible trades, it’s too late. Bitcoin is now in a bear market.

Third, that doesn’t mean that traders can’t trade Bitcoin up and down.

h3 Name Your Terms/h3

There is a lot of confusion among traders regarding trends. Traders often ask whether the trend is up or down.

Before answering that, the trader needs to qualify the question. What trend is the trader looking at? Trends range from secular (ranging decades), to long-term (ranging months to years), to midterm (ranging weeks to months), to short-term (ranging days to weeks), to day trading to scalping.

An asset could be in an uptrend in one period while in a downtrend in another. Therefore, first name your term. Only then can you figure out its trend.