Bitcoin (BTC) recovered from a major dip at the May 26 Wall Street open as the market quickly exhausted buy support. 

BTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

Bitcoin volume surges with more expected

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD dropping to $28,000 on Bitstamp — its lowest since May 12 and the Terra LUNA implosion. 

Progress had already accelerated to the downside on the day, this culminating in a liquidity grab that sent 24-hour BTC liquidations to $117 million.

BTC liquidations chart. Source: Coinglass

A subsequent bounce saw a recovery above $29,000, where Bitcoin traded at the time of writing.

For Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, the swoop to fill bids was enough to ensure some fresh upside.

He added that his existing targets for BTC/USD — $32,800 and $35,000 — remained in force.

Analyzing order book data, meanwhile, on-chain monitoring resource Material Indicators warned that given the thin liquidity remaining at lower levels, a future dip could encounter less resistance.

“We are seeing A LOT of Bitcoin liquidity changing hands today. Everywhere a bid wall appears, it gets absorbed,” it told Twitter followers alongside a chart from major exchange Binance.

“Currently there are no more huge bid walls and there is only ~$122M between $28k – $25k. Expecting to see more BTC move on chain.”

BTC/USD order book chart (Binance). Source: Material Indicators/ Twitter

Fellow trading account Il Capo of Crypto, continuing a conservative outlook on near-term price action, predicted that the current bounce would be the “last bull trap” before a return to $25,000 based on order book performance.

May 26 thus stood out from other trading days during the week thanks to volume returning to BTC/USD markets. As Cointelegraph reported, its absence was becoming a source of concern for analysts.

Bitcoin’s “most important chart” gives hope of recovery

Casting the net farther out, market commentators were keen to see signs of an overall change in trend on Bitcoin.

For popular analyst Root, those signs came from the behavior of long-term holder (LTHs) on the day.

According to on-chain data, LTHs were finally slowing sales of BTC, as shown by their cost basis leveling out. Cost basis refers to the price at which LTH accounts purchased BTC on aggregate, and when it falls, it reflects declining LTH resolve.

Commenting in Twitter thread, Root described the data as “perhaps the most important chart in BTC currently.”

“For the past months we’ve had LTH capitulation ⁠— shown by the rapidly falling LTH Cost Basis,” it wrote.

“An uptick is a first sign that LTH’s might have stopped capitulating! Note: early signal, but finally a change in trend!”

He added that those LTH entities selling were those who purchased BTC at the top and that the sales thus had a capitulatory quality to them.


Source: Cointelegraph

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