Bitcoin is rallying relentlessly, insomuch that it is touching a new yearly high every other day.
The past few weeks have witnessed the cryptocurrency in its most organically-driven bullish avatars. It broke resistance levels that first seemed too difficult to achieve ($10,500). It then built a concrete upside outlook upon the newly-found price floors, using macro narratives such as inflation to attract more quality capital.
The result is a new price breakout. This week, Bitcoin [almost] reached $16,500, a level it last tested in December 2017 during its bearish correction from its all-time high near $20,000 the previous month. None of the other anti-inflation assets (read gold) were able to match Bitcoin’s ascending momentum.
Bitcoin RSI
Bitcoin’s upside moves have finally made it an overbought asset. In simple words, its price is running way ahead of its average demand, as confirmed by the Relative Strength Index, a barometer to gauge “the magnitude of recent price changes to evaluate an asset’s overbought or oversold conditions.”
Ideally, Bitcoin should undergo a trend reversal to neutralize its excessively bullish bias. But traders have turned blind-eyed on the RSI that has been in an overbought zone since mid-October 2020.
The BTC/USD weekly RSI—historically—has extended its welcome inside the overbought territory for months, as shown in the chart above. The pair may end up losing its upside strength after a while. Nevertheless, it is more likely to regain the bias as long as global fundamentals stay negative.
And from the look of market analysts, the Bitcoin rally is not going anywhere in the coming weekly sessions. The reason is…
…A Weak US Dollar
Strategists from the US financial sector believe the greenback is due to fall lower during a Joe Biden presidency.
“Victory for President-Elect Biden means a return to more conventional governance. As the President’s province, it will result in a major shift in the way foreign policy is conducted. Alliance building will return. ‘Tariff threat first’ negotiating tactics will end,” — Citibank Private Bank’s chief investment officer, David Bailin, and Steven Wieting, chief investment strategist, and chief economist, said in a note published Monday.
It will allow the money to flow back into the emerging markets, thereby causing a value migration from the US dollar to foreign assets.
The US Dollar Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of foreign currencies, fell 1.92 percent last week after Mr. Biden gained lead against US President Donald Trump.
Nevertheless, the index recouped a portion of its losses this week as investors assessed a delay in the election counts, followed by uncertainty led by Mr. Trump’s lawsuits against the Democrats alleging election fraud.
In the views of legendary investors like Paul Tudor Jones and Stan Druckenmiller, Bitcoin is an ideal hedge against the US dollar’s bearish outlook. Their sentiments toward the cryptocurrency were on their prime this week as Bitcoin closed above $16,000.
“With Stan Druckenmiller, Michael Saylor, and more listed companies jumping into the Bitcoin markets, it’s quite clear that we’re at the early stage of a new bull cycle,” said Michaël van de Poppe, an independent market analyst.
So it appears, the cryptocurrency’s short-term downside correction is less likely to outweigh its long-term bullish bias (as long as the US dollar loses its purchasing power).