Bitcoin (BTC) consolidated near $34,000 after the Oct. 24 Wall Street open as the dust settled on 15% daily gains.
BTC/USD 1-hour chart. Source: TradingView
Opinions diverge on Bitcoin funding rates
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView tracked BTC price volatility through the day, with $34,000 a focus at the time of writing.
The pair had previously hit 17-month highs near $35,200 on the back of fresh excitement over the potential approval of a Bitcoin spot price exchange-traded fund (ETF) in the United States.
Analyzing the sequence of events which led to a $5,000 daily candle, monitoring resource Material Indicators revealed a support/resistance (R/S) flip at $30,600.
The speed at which the market broke through resistance in place throughout the past year-and-a-half was surprising, an X post read. Material Indicators “honestly expected to see more resistance at $30.5k, $31.5k and even $33k.”
“Those levels were obliterated and and when an $87M buy wall appeared at $30.6k that set the foundation for a R/S flip with no hesitation from the market,” it explained.
“Once $32k was taken out, some of the overhead liquidity was pulled and the thin liquidity made it easy for BTC to rip to $35k quickly.”
The post added that with some bid liquidity now pulled from below, there was a “opportunity for a potential retrace.”
One of two accompanying charts covered the past 24 hours on the Binance order book.
BTC/USD order book data for Binance. Source: Material Indicators/X
Other factors lining up to contribute to a deeper consolidation included funding rates across exchanges, which at the time of writing were deep inside positive territory.
Be cautious with new longs❗️ pic.twitter.com/jsuXPdIhRq
— CryptoBullet (@CryptoBullet1) October 24, 2023
“Funding is grossly positive,” popular trader CryptoBullet wrote during an X discussion.
“It means that the vast majority of traders are longing. The majority is never right. The market maker will have to wipe out those late longs.”
BTC short liquidations on the way up totalled $161 million and $48 million for Oct. 23 and 24, respectively, per data from monitoring resource CoinGlass.
Bitcoin liquidations (screenshot). Source: CoinGlass
Commenting on funding rates, fellow trader Daan Crypto Trades argued that the market might yet preserve its direction — part of familiar bull market behavior.
#Bitcoin Still a perpetual premium but it has come down a bit.
It’s good to note that during the bull market, we often had weeks of positive funding rates as that was just seen as “the price to pay to participate”.
Similar how during 2022-2023 we were mostly negative. https://t.co/W3AtaydaQd pic.twitter.com/Hl2mnVz9sa
— Daan Crypto Trades (@DaanCrypto) October 24, 2023
Bitcoin’s retracement on the day came inside a reversal upward for U.S. dollar strength, which had waned the day prior.
Dollar rebounds as BTC price consolidates
Related: Bitcoin price surge drives BTC-related stocks to new multiweek highs
The U.S. dollar index (DXY) retook 106, up 0.5% versus its intraday low.
Bitcoin continues to exhibit mixed reactions to DXY movements, where once a clear inverse correlation was apparent.
It’s too obvious that $DXY is moving downward since it forms a new lower low.
At the same time, a nice breakout can be seen in #Bitcoin. pic.twitter.com/NP65yDnlRJ
— Trader Tardigrade (@TATrader_Alan) October 24, 2023
In recent commentary, popular macro analyst James Stanley argued that the Oct. 26 Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) data release would be the major decisive factor for DXY in the short term.
As Cointelegraph reported, this precedes the Nov. 1 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), where the Federal Reserve will decide on interest rate policy.
“104.70 was the low from last FOMC, that’s what bulls need to defend imo,” Stanley wrote.
U.S. dollar index (DXY) 1-hour chart. Source: TradingView
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.