Bitcoin is flashing signs of buyer exhaustion near the $47,000 price tag as bull pressure begins to wane, according to on-chain data and CoinDesk sources.
The crypto is currently changing hands for around $45,000 after reaching a 24-hour top of $46,767, CoinDesk data shows. The temporary stay in price might be short-lived, however, as prices begin toying with major psychological resistance near $50,000, according to some.
“The derivatives markets are long, perpetual funding rates are positive for shorts, indicating short-term positive interest from retail,” Toby Chapple, head of trading at digital asset firm Zerocap, told CoinDesk via Telegram.
On the institutional side, things look slightly different, according to Chapple, who said calendar futures across both bitcoin and ether were “fairly compressed” pointing toward open interest growing for short positions.
Bitcoin is up 50% over a three-week period, having broken a long-term moving average on the back of strong institutional and retail demand. Still, the crypto is showing signs of buyer exhaustion as seen by the relative strength index, an indicator used to gauge a given trend.
“Markets need to digest some overbought levels before attempting $50,000-$55,000 resistance,” Chapple said.
And while bitcoin’s rally on the back of Ethereum’s ‘London’ Hard Fork has helped drive prices, political tensions in the U.S. and China’s crackdown remain a “significant threat” to the crypto market, Jehan Chu, managing partner at Hong Kong-based crypto investment firm Kenetic Capital, told CoinDesk via WhatsApp on Thursday.
“With the ‘Saylor Surge’ and the ‘Elon Effect’ exhausted, bitcoin likely falters at $50,000 before crashing to sub-$30,000 levels, clearing space for a new year-end institutional catalyst to lift past all-time highs,” said Chu in relation to a mid-term projection on prices.
In the immediate short-term, a pullback is likely as demonstrated by the number of active bitcoin addresses beginning to decline once again, according to data by provider Glassnode.