Pressure on Chinese tech stocks adds to a potent cocktail of inflation and geopolitical strife, with Wall Street closed for trading.
Bitcoin (BTC) kept falling lower on Feb. 21 as $38,000 became the latest level to fail the test for bulls.
$40,000 eyed as BTC relief bounce target
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView painted a grim picture for BTC/USD Monday, as $38,000 support abruptly vanished after holding throughout the weekend.
#BTC Update 1h TF
First retest of key trendline since reclaim @ $38,5k
Current range $36,6k – $37,8k pic.twitter.com/sjxUv7AGlV
— AN₿ESSA (@Anbessa100) February 21, 2022
While threatening to invalidate analysts’ hopes of a bottom being in, the chances of a rebound to $40,000 were nonetheless good, one argued.
“Not expecting this leg to go very deep tho, should see a bounce towards 40k soon,” Crypto Ed told Twitter followers.
In a video update on the day, Crypto Ed had forecast a multi-leg downtrend continuing, with $40,000 forming the target of a relief bounce before another dive ensued, this even having the potential to take out $30,000.
“If we somehow manage to get back above $40,000 and go up, then I’m bullish; otherwise not,” he concluded, adding that it would take a “miracle” for such a bullish case to come true.
To the downside, a silver lining came in the form of increasing bids at $37,000 appearing on the Binance order book as BTC/USD drifted lower.
Data from monitoring resource Material Indicators further highlighted large transactions staying fairly constant, indicating institutional-grade investors maintaining interest in BTC exposure.
Smaller buyers, however, were in two minds at current levels.
“Some bid liquidity in the $20k range has faded upward to the $30s, but want to see a bigger concentration of bids to get market buyers off hands,” Material Indicators creator Material Scientist added in comments on a chart showing the latest action.
A familiar Chinese tech plunge enters
A Wall Street holiday, meanwhile, meant a lack of convincing volume on crypto markets Monday, this being apt to exacerbate moves in any direction due to thin liquidity.
Related: ‘Coin days destroyed’ spike hinting at BTC price bottom? 5 things to watch in Bitcoin this week
Macro cues, however, continued to flow in, with developments from the Russia–Ukraine conflict primed to unsettle already nervous sentiment.
Reports of death on the border came as European stock markets jittered, the FTSE 100 down 0.5% in London and Germany’s DAX down 1.3% on the day.
Another crackdown on tech in China fuelled separate troubles for Asian markets, with Tencent shedding over 6% during trading.
Tencent leads #China tech selloff amid fears of further crackdown. Tencent fell as much as 6.3%. Beijing's banking watchdog issued warning against illegal fund-raising schemes & an industry association vowed Mon to resist speculative trades in cap mkt. Alibaba dropped 4%. (BBG) pic.twitter.com/OZBDK2Hbyv
— Holger Zschaepitz (@Schuldensuehner) February 21, 2022
The tech stock rout was highly reminiscent of July 2021, the period during which Bitcoin retraced the entirety of its year-to-date gains to bottom out at near $29,000.