Ether (ETH) and Bitcoin (BTC) pulled back on July 28 as investors awaited fresh guidance from the Federal Reserve.
ETH price slipped by 0.57% to $2,857, while the BTC/USD prices were up 0.68%, changing hands at $39,739 at around 10:30 EST. Nonetheless, both the pairs reached their current levels following a downside correction from their respective intraday highs of $2,391 and $40,925, respectively.
Traders raised their exposure in the cryptocurrency market after Tesla’s Elon Musk, Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood, and Twitter’s Jack Dorsey spoke in favor of Bitcoin during the B-Word Conference last week. More tailwinds came amid speculations about Amazon’s plans to accept BTC as payments, a rumor that the retail giant denied later.
Ether, whose 30-day correlation with Bitcoin stands at 89% positive, moved in tandem with Bitcoin. Their synchronized price trends continued into the New York trading session Wednesday, just as markets waited for the Federal Reserve to reveal its tapering plans.
Talk about talking about tapering
The U.S. central bank officials will conclude their two-day policy meeting on Wednesday, with a statement scheduled to come out at 14:00 EST. Investors’ focus will be on signals from chairman Jerome Powell about how and when the Fed would start unwinding its asset purchase program, and any potential shift in their view on inflation.
In detail, the U.S. consumer price index has boomed to hit 5.4% on a year-over-year basis. As a result, as much as 54% of Americans think that the US economy is in poor shape, per a poll conducted by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
But the Fed has rubbished the higher consumer prices by calling them “transitory” in nature. As a result, Powell said in his congressional testimony earlier this month that the central bank would continue its $120 billion a month bond-purchasing program, raising worries that it would cause further inflationary spikes, especially in the housing sector.
Brian O’Reilly, head of market strategy for Mediolanum International Funds, noted that there are no signs of inflation cooling down in the sessions ahead so the Fed might just start looking into the rising consumer prices, if not putting a pause on their bond-buying program. He added:
“There will be no change, but they are at the stage where they are starting to talk about talking about tapering.”
What happens to Bitcoin, Ethereum next?
The Ethereum and Bitcoin markets’ biggest vulnerability is that their valuations may not be sustained without expanding liquidity from the Fed.
Related: Bitcoin bull outlines 7 steps to more fiscal stimulus and higher BTC prices
Meanwhile, the strong underpinning is that there is substantial capital sitting on the sidelines to enter the market, with a DataTrek Research report noting that retail investors on Robinhood alone hold $400 billion to enter markets on the next big dip. FRED’s Retail Money Fund also notes that retail investors hold over $1 trillion versus $643 billion in 2015.
“We live in an unprecedented time of fiscal and monetary stimulus,” noted Anthony Pompliano, a prominent crypto advocate and the partner at Pomp Investments, in one of his recent notes to clients. He added that investors would do so much better while putting money in financial instruments than holding cash or negative-yielding assets. He said:
“If our government and economic organizations continue to outlaw bear markets and ban market corrections through their intervention actions, then the market will only be allowed to go higher and higher over time.”
Given 20% of the American public know BTC well enough to hold it, and at current growth rates, shitting on #Bitcoin will be political suicide in the next few years.
— Willy Woo (@woonomic) July 28, 2021
Tim Frost, CEO of DeFi wealth management platform Yield App, weighed concerns over analysts’ renewed upside outlook for Ether and Bitcoin.
He told Cointelegraph that the markets could resume their downtrend following “a brief rally,” wherein Bitcoin falls to as low as $20,000, taking Ethereum lower alongside, adding that:
“An altcoin revival is a very long way off. The crypto fear and greed index is also still very much skewed towards fear – indeed for the longest period it has ever been skewed in that direction. This isn’t the beginning of a new bull run as much as the bear being caught off guard taking a nap.”
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