Bitcoin and Ethereum were under pressure on Tuesday evening as the global cryptocurrency market cap fell 1% to $904.9 billion.
Coin | 24-hour | 7-day | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) | -0.6% | -0.8% | $20,135.59 |
Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) | -1.8% | -1.35% | $1,131 |
Dogecoin (CRYPTO: DOGE) | -3.6% | 0.8% | $0.07 |
Cryptocurrency | 24-Hour % Change (+/-) | Price |
---|---|---|
Convex Finance (CVX) | +23.5% | $5.86 |
Curve DAO Token (CRV) | +10.3% | $0.96 |
Basic Attention Token (BAT) | +6.3% | ​​$0.44 |
See Also: How To Get Free Crypto
Why It Matters: Cryptocurrencies continue to maintain their inverse relationship with the greenback.
On Tuesday, the dollar index, which measures the strength of the U.S. unit against a basket of six currencies, rose 1.3% after hitting the highest level since Dec. 2002, despite fears of a looming recession, reported Reuters.
“The demand for the safety of dollar-based assets is up as expectations for economic activity are significantly lower,” said Shawn Cruz, the head trading strategist at TD Ameritrade in Chicago, according to Reuters.
GlobalBlock analyst Marcus Sotiriou said in a note that “Dollar strength causes Bitcoin weakness.” A further negative for cryptocurrencies has been the withdrawal of liquidity, according to Sotiriou.
“Bitcoin remains below the 2017 all-time-high which is concerning for bulls. The [Terra Classic (LUNC) ] and [TerraClassicUSD (USTC)] crash has led to a tragic contagion amongst other crypto firms, as we have seen liquidity withdrawn from the crypto market at an extraordinary rate.”
Cryptocurrency trader Justin Bennett said that the dollar index closed above a significant multi-year level in June and on Tuesday touched new 20-year highs.
Many won’t like this but…
The $DXY closed above a significant multi-year level in June, and today we’re seeing new 20-year highs from the dollar index.
All signs point to 120, suggesting another 12-20 months of suppressed movement from stocks and #crypto. $SPY $BTC $ETH pic.twitter.com/7WC8srj8bO
— Justin Bennett (@JustinBennettFX) July 5, 2022
“All signs point to 120, suggesting another 12-20 months of suppressed movement from stocks and [cryptocurrencies].”
Michaël van de Poppe expects Bitcoin to consolidate and then break the next resistance zone and then continue on to the $23,000 level.
This one did crack the resistance and ran towards the next area of resistance at $20.3K.
I’m expecting #Bitcoin to consolidate for a bit here, but breaking the next resistance zone is a trigger for continuation towards $23K and a summer relief rally. https://t.co/e8tFtrnEsz pic.twitter.com/DnQHcCL3dF
— Michaël van de Poppe (@CryptoMichNL) July 5, 2022
Van de Poppe noted the strength of the dollar index but said it was matched on the equities side as well.
First time we’re seeing such a recovery after a severe correction + strength on the $DXY.
Strength on the equities as well.
Wouldn’t be surprised if this continues in the coming period, despite the overall sentiment being ultra bearish.
— Michaël van de Poppe (@CryptoMichNL) July 5, 2022
“First time we’re seeing such a recovery after a severe correction + strength on the [dollar index].”
“Wouldn’t be surprised if this continues in the coming period, despite the overall sentiment being ultra bearish,” said the cryptocurrency trader.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed 0.2% and 1.75% higher, respectively, on Tuesday. Their futures were up 0.2% and 0.3%, respectively, at press time.
On-chain metrics indicate that Bitcoin supply in loss has hit 48.1% of all coins held outside exchanges. Of these Bitcoins in loss, 60% of them are held by long-term holders, tweeted Glassnode.
The proportion of #Bitcoin supply in loss has hit 48.1% of all coins held outside exchanges.
Of these $BTC in loss, almost 60% of therm are held by Long-Term Holders (28.6% of total).
Both metrics are at similar levels to the Nov-Dec 2018, and March 2020 capitulation phases. pic.twitter.com/sCLnAWEQ1Y
— glassnode (@glassnode) July 5, 2022
Read Next: Is Bitcoin Red? ‘Black Swan’ Author Nassim Taleb Likens ‘Cryptoism’ With Communism
Photo via Stepan Kapl on Shutterstock