Bitcoin (BTC) tagged $57,000 at the Sept. 5 Wall Street open as United States equities gained on macroeconomic data prints.
US jobs data keeps bumper rate hike hopes alive
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed a BTC price action briefly reversing a slide that had begun after the prior daily close.
Down 2.3% on the day, BTC/USD took only modest relief from a bounce in US stocks as macro figures reinforced an upcoming interest rate cut.
Among the releases was a wide miss among private-sector payrolls, which rose by 99,000 versus the 144,000 expected.
“This marks the smallest gain since 2021,” trading resource The Kobeissi Letter wrote in part of a response on X.
“What is happening to the labor market?”
The latest estimates from CME Group’s FedWatch Tool saw markets continuing to entertain the possibility of a more significant rate cut by the US Federal Reserve at its next meeting on Sept. 18.
More jobs data on Sept. 4 presented a similar picture, with job openings in the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey decreasing to 7.67 million instead of the anticipated 8.1 million.
Reacting on X, macroeconomic commentary account Macro Dose described the result as “substantially worse than expected.”
“As the Fed looks to become more focussed on their employment mandate as the labor market continues to cool they’ll be keeping a close eye on the rest of the data due for release this week in order to inform their decision on if, and by how much, they plan on cutting rates at their meeting later this month,” it concluded.
As Cointelegraph continues to report, risk asset traders, including those focused on crypto, hope that a more significant rate cut will, in turn, inspire an influx of liquidity into the markets.
BTC price “double bottom” on the cards
Turning to Bitcoin itself, market participants saw a need to wait for the last round of unemployment data on Sept. 6 for clues as to Bitcoin’s trend intentions.
Related: Bitcoin transactions dive 30% in 6 months amid BTC price ‘disinterest’
Keith Alan, co-founder of trading resource Material Indicators, nonetheless warned that the August lows of $49,500 could still act as a magnet for a “double bottom” to come.
In his latest video analysis, Alan even suggested that this would be cathartic for Bitcoin’s overall uptrend, as it would offer a backtest of a previously contested area.
“To that end, I really want to see this retest, and even more, since $50,000 was broken, might we even go lower?” he queried.
A key trendline in focus was the 50-week simple moving average, currently at $53,355.
Popular trader CrypNuevo, meanwhile, suggested a relief bounce for BTC/USD just above $60,000 should the unemployment data offer another risk-asset boost.
“Some liquidations are gathering between $60k and $60.2k in the 7 days liq. Heatmap,” he wrote alongside exchange order book data.
“It seems difficult but we could get there if we have good labour market data tomorrow - crucial day for the markets in anticipation to the next FOMC meeting.”
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.