Bitcoinâs price passed $12,000 for the first time since September as Ethereum fees dipped.
Bitcoinâs price continued to make gains Tuesday following Mondayâs steady price appreciation. The worldâs oldest cryptocurrency breached $12,000 around 17:00 UTC (1 p.m. ET), going as high as $12,058 before settling in at $11,910 as of press time.Â
The last time bitcoin was over $12,000 was back on Sept. 1, according to Bitstamp spot pricing. (CryptoCompare, using index-weighted pricing, puts it at Aug. 19.) David Lifchitz, chief investment officer at ExoAlpha, says bitcoin could hit $12,500 at some point soon but will face a struggle. âThe real resistance level is around $12,500-ish, so until a meaningful breakout above that level, nothing is done, $12,000 is just a psychological level.â
Lifchitz said that while the price level is notable, it could lead to bitcoin staying in a sideways pattern around this level similar to when it crossed $10,000. âBitcoin, having held above $10,000 for more than two months in a row, was a bullish sign, even if it had been trading sideways in a $2,000 range.â
Nevertheless, the last time bitcoin traded below $10,000 on the spot market was back on Sept. 9. This piece of data appears to be bolstering some investorsâ faith.Â
âWe continue to break the record each day for the longest streak a bitcoin trades above $10,000, so overall investor confidence is growing I think,â said Michael Gord, chief executive officer of trading firm Global Digital Assets.Â
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Bill Noble, cryptocurrency strategist for analysis firm Token Metrics, said momentum is shifting from Ethereum-based decentralized finance, or DeFi, to bitcoin. âETH and DeFi are watching BTC awaken like a sleeping giant,â he said. âThe BTC move to $12,000 is sending the altcoin universe scrambling for cover.âÂ
Bitcoin dominance, a metric that calculates the cryptocurrencyâs share versus other assets on the market, has been trending up since the start of October. The last time dominance was at this level was at the end of August.Â
âAlthough there is positive sentiment around BTC, bull runs usually lead to a bear market in alt coins,â noted Melvis Langyintuo, a market strategist for the San Francisco-based cryptocurrency exchange OKCoin.
Market conditions may mean DeFi discounts could develop for traders, Token Metricsâ Noble noted. âA BTC move above $12,000 could result in a DeFi dip that could be bigger than most expect,â he said. âAny such move could be a golden opportunity to pick up the survivors of the DeFi shakeout at discounted prices.â
The second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, ether (ETH), was down Tuesday trading around $369 and slipping 2.6% in 24 hours as of 20:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET).Â
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On Saturday, Oct. 17, the daily average fee on the Ethereum network hit a three-month low, at 0.00246199 ETH. Thatâs a level not seen since July 12 when the average was 0.00211437 ETH. Fees, which are trending back up from Sundayâs low, are required on Ethereum to send transactions, including to smart-contract based DeFi platforms.
Jean-Marc Bonnefous, managing partner of Tellurian Capital, an investment firm that has followed cryptocurrencies since 2014, said deflation of DeFi hype is causing fees to go down. âGas fees are lower as the recent enthusiasm for DeFi tokens, [decentralized exchanges] and [automated market makers] has hit a wall for now,â Bonnefous told CoinDesk.Â
If DeFi heats up again, expect higher fees, Bonnefous added. âWe could be in for a few weeks of consolidation before another push higher for DeFi tokens, which will most likely see gas costs flaring again. The problem of high gas fees wonât go away without structural enhancements.â
Digital assets on the CoinDesk 20 are mixed, mostly red on Tuesday. Notable winners as of 20:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET):
Notable losers as of 20:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET):
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