Bitcoin has suffered another drop. Falling $13 since our last price piece, the digital currency now hovers around $666 at press time (sorry to all you religious people out there).
“Bitcoin price looked to be advancing only to bump against the resistance ceiling. How to trade in the coming days (or weeks) is dependent on how the market negotiates $680.”
In our last report, bitcoin was priced a $679, and as the source clearly explains, was on the verge of hitting $680, but now such a move has failed to take place.
Several occurrences could ultimately decipher what bitcoin will do next and whether it moves north or south. On the positive side, there are several regional factors that we must take into account. Bitcoin and digital currency, in general, is earning quite a reputation in Latin America. Recently, the region was introduced to Dash services by way of TigoCTM, a crypto-teller machine which has “added Dash to its roster of cryptocurrencies.” Customers in Latin America will now be able to sell and purchase Dash like they would bitcoin.
Currently, drops in national currency value and inflation have caused many to seek out financial alternatives. CEO Cindy Zimmerman states:
“We started this company in Panama because there was no way for anyone there to convert cash into cryptocurrency, and after the financial crisis in Venezuela took hold, the demand for an alternative way of accessing money quickly grew. For example, the bolivar has recently seen 100% year over year inflation; bitcoin has been more stable than some local fiat currencies.”
A similar problem is being witnessed in Europe and the U.K. Since the Brexit vote, bitcoin has become more “stable than the pound,” according to singer-songwriter Lily Allen, and she has a point. The British pound has fallen significantly against the U.S. dollar, and bitcoin trading was at its highest the eve following the vote.
Ethereum Hard Fork Distracting Bitcoin Markets?
But there is also a cloud hovering over bitcoin fans. Ethereum experienced a recent hard-fork following a cyber-attack that caused the DAO to lose millions in Ether funds. The hard-fork has been particularly controversial and was considered by many to be near-impossible, but several eventually came together to vote for the move. Following the event, Ether’s price spiked, which could have potentially wounded bitcoin. As we’ve seen, the two appear directly related; when Ethereum goes up, bitcoin seems to sink, even if only for a little while.
And as always, until stabilization occurs, caution is being instructed:
“Bitcoin price has not retaken $680, and the market is sliding away from this resistance level. The bulls might become reinvigorated lower down on the chart, but there is no need to try and predict what the largest wallets might do – rather make your trade when they actually do it. $680 is a key level… Let’s remain patient and disciplined… The market rewards discipline. It makes more sense to preserve account funds for when we do see a clearly signaled opportunity, rather than chasing after potential ‘to the moon’ rally waves in frustration. Put another way: we might want to see the market take ownership of $680 rather than make money bets that it might!”
Images courtesy of Ethereum, financemagnates.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment