Bitcoin sought to flip $62,000 to support on Sept. 19 as markets digested a rare 0.5% interest rate cut by the United States Federal Reserve.
BTC/USD 4-hour chart. Source: TradingView
BTC price sees three-week highs as Fed cuts big
Data from
Cointelegraph Markets Pro
and
TradingView
followed continued Bitcoin (
BTC
) price strength during the Asia trading session.
Local highs of $62,600 followed the Fed’s move, which was only the third time in history that a rate-cutting cycle had
begun with a 0.5% reduction
.
These, in turn, liquidated short BTC positions across exchange order books. Data from monitoring resource
CoinGlass
put the total for the 24 hours to the time of writing at $128 million.
“Now we need to reduce leverage or take profits,” it
told
followers on X in a subsequent analysis, warning them not to “get carried away.”
BTC liquidation heatmap (screenshot). Source: CoinGlass
Previously, Cointelegraph reported on a
BTC price prediction calling for $64,000
in the event of a 0.5% cut, which ultimately proved too much for bulls to muster as significant resistance lingered overhead.
“Bitcoin slowly eating its way through the resistance level,” popular trader Jelle
reported
on X.
US Dollar Index (DXY) 1-hour chart. Source: TradingView
The US dollar saw volatile conditions, meanwhile, with the US Dollar Index (DXY) initially also rising before giving up its gains to return to prior support.
“Sitting at the edge of support. Breakdown can result in a sharp move towards 96,” popular trader Aksel Kibar
responded
in his latest DXY analysis on X.
US Dollar Index (DXY) 1-month chart. Source: Aksel Kibar/X
For Arthur Hayes, former CEO of crypto exchange BitMEX, attention was now on the Bank of Japan’s own rates decision due on Sept. 20.
The strength of the yen would, in turn, influence BTC price performance, he suggested.
Source:
Arthur Hayes
“Something doesn’t add up”
Zooming out, however, trading resource The Kobeissi Letter had a clear warning for risk-asset traders.
Related:
Markets see 0.5% Fed rate cut — 5 Things to know in Bitcoin this week
While seemingly boosting liquidity, rate-cutting cycles beginning with a 0.5% decrease ultimately result in losses for US equities.
“In 2001, the market fell 31% after 2 years and in 2007 the market fell 26% after 2 years. These were major crises,” part of an X thread
recalled
.
Kobeissi contrasted the Fed’s upbeat message with the scale of its policy dial-back, suggesting a contradiction in play.
“If the Fed has only started with 50 basis point rate cuts during crises, why start with 50 bps this time?” it queried.
Fed target rate probabilities. Source: CME Group
Data from CME Group’s
FedWatch Tool
showed odds of another 0.5% cut being less likely than a smaller 0.25% follow-up at the Fed’s next meeting on Nov. 7.
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.
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