Bitcoin has plenty of resistance levels to deal with as CPI starts a major macro week for risk asset markets.
MARKET UPDATE
returned above $26,000 on June 13 as analysts eyed resistance overhead.
Bitcoin price inches between trend lines
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD attempting to reclaim $26,000 support after the daily close.
The pair had seen a curiously uneventful start to the week, this despite ongoing fallout from United States legal action and markets preparing for a slew of macroeconomic data releases.
Bitcoin thus remained in a narrow range in place since midway through the weekend.
“Risky day for any deep trades,” popular trader Crypto Tony wrote in part of the day’s Twitter analysis, considering upside potential should the support flip occur.
Trading suite Decentrader meanwhile flagged multiple resistance levels to overcome next. It noted that funding rates were climbing, indicating a potential trend reversal already entering.
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Other traders, including Moustache and Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, noted BTC/USD still holding trend lines which could be cause for optimism — specifically, the 21-week and 200-week exponential moving averages (EMAs).
“Ultimately, we’ll see coming few days whether that’s going to sustain or whether we’ll continue this downwards slope,” Van de Poppe commented the day prior about the latter.
CPI day arrives
Macro data prints for the week center on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) due June 13 — just a day before the Federal Reserve announces interest rate changes.
Related: SEC, CPI and a ‘strong rebound’ — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week
The Fed is expected to enact a pause in interest rate hikes, something which would follow a full ten consecutive hikes and mark a long-awaited turning point in policy.
While a potentia boon for risk assets, including crypto, not everyone was upbeat about the impact of a rates freeze.
“The Fed will likely still sound hawkish but the more important question is if they will hold rates where they are (effectively tightening policy) if inflation falls further,” analytics account The Long View wrote in part of its latest Twitter commentary.
According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, market odds of a freeze stood at around 75% at the time of writing.
“I think they will as they are highly attuned to the fact that if they start to cut like past cycles they will be helping to reignite rate sensitive sectors effectively undermining the work they have done.”
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