Traders want a bitcoin price breakout but they arenât sure when that will happen.
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Traders are optimistic that bitcoinâs weak market, with low volumes and low volatility, can quickly change. Price movement outside of the low $9,000s territory is key, said Rupert Douglas, head of business development and institutional sales at London brokerage Koine. âThis tussle between bulls and bears from $9,000 to $9,500 is a slow grind at the moment. A close outside these boundaries will likely see a sharp move either way.âÂ
It will take more exciting news than a Twitter hack attempting to scam social media users out of bitcoin to bring the worldâs oldest cryptocurrency out of stagnation, said Jean-Baptiste Pavageau, a partner at Paris-based quantitative trading firm ExoAlpha.Â
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âThe fact that bitcoin didnât move because of the Twitter scam shows the importance of $9,100-$9,200 range to either consolidate the trend and move higher or invalidate the level and fall toward $8,200,â said Pavageau.Â
In a sleepy bitcoin sector, several analysts pointed to the crypto derivatives market as a sign the industry is still growing. âIn general, the markets have come a long way and I am particularly excited about some of the new derivatives platforms that have emerged.â Mick Sherman, founder of New York-based Trading Firm Altcoin Advisors.Â
In particular, CME, Binance and ByBit have seen growth in open interest.
In addition, U.S. dollar-denominated open interest on Seychelles-based derivatives exchange BitMEX is around $700 million, a high not seen since the excitement surrounding May 12âs bitcoin halving, a scheduled reduction in the cryptocurrencyâs new supply output that happens roughly every four years.Â
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âWe still see a lot of interest and building momentum for derivatives and expect this to continue for some time, particularly as traditional managers seem less interested in holding the underlying but still want exposure to price movement,â said Douglas Bilyk, business development director at crypto brokerage Copper.Â
Derivatives might be a factor, but cryptocurrencies other than bitcoin could weigh on the market as well, Bilyk added. âWeâre expecting a large bitcoin move but direction is unclear. One âcanary in the coal mineâ might be the bullish moves in some of the blockchain development tokens these past few weeks.âÂ
The second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, ether (ETH), was up Friday, trading around $233 and climbing 0.33% in 24 hours as of 20:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. EDT).Â
This week, the Ethereum network experienced the most transactions in over two and a half years. On Monday, total transactions reached 1,151,834, the first time it has been that high since Jan. 18, 2018, according to data from aggregator Etherscan.Â
With decentralized exchanges now around $60 million in volume per day, tokens on the Ethereum network, often referred to as altcoins, are giving traders new ideas to profit within the cryptocurrency ecosystem. âI donât see bitcoin as a clear trading opportunity right now, however there are some opportunities with altcoins that have performed really well lately.â said Alessandro Andreotti, an Italy-based bitcoin over-the-counter trader.
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Digital assets on the CoinDesk 20 are mostly in the red Friday. Notable winners as of 20:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET):Â
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Notable losers as of 20:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET):Â
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Equities:
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Commodities:Â
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Treasurys:
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