Bitcoin (BTC) kicked off the historically strong second quarter on a positive note, scoring gains overnight despite further losses on Wall Street.
The top cryptocurrency by market value rose 3.5 percent from $6,420 to $6,650, having closed Q1 2020 with a 10 percent loss, according to CoinDesk’s Bitcoin Price Index.
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The cryptocurrency remained bid even as the U.S. equities began Q2 on a weak note with the S&P 500 falling 4 percent. Investors shunned risk as President Trump’s stark warning on the coronavirus pandemic raised the specter of a prolonged shutdown and deeper economic recession.
Bitcoin printing gains amid the risk-off action in traditional markets is a welcome change for observers who believe the cryptocurrency is a haven asset like gold. The cryptocurrency largely tracked the S&P 500 in March as fears of a coronavirus-led recession triggered a global dash for cash.
Historical data shows bitcoin has put in a positive performance in six out of the last eight years, as seen below.
Sellers had an upper hand in the second quarter of 2013 and 2018, but the losses were restricted to single digits. The 161 percent rally seen in the second quarter of 2019 is the third biggest quarterly gain on record.
Many analysts are of the opinion that the massive money-printing efforts recently announced by global governments and central banks amid the Covid-19 crisis could boost bitcoin’s appeal as an inflation hedge.
And, while it’s far from certain, the mining reward halving – the programmed-in 50 percent reduction in rewards for bitcoin miners due in May – may put upward pressure on prices. “A bitcoin emission cut of 50 percent is a fundamentally bullish even,” said Connor Abendschein, crypto research analyst at Digital Assets Data.
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So bitcoin may repeat history by ending the April to June period in the green. Gains, however, may remain elusive if stock markets see another massive price sell-off, again triggering a liquidity crisis like we saw last month. In that case, investors will likely stay away from the crypto markets.
With the virus outbreak showing no signs of slowing down, the possibility of a deeper stock market crash shouldn’t be ruled out. “The impact of the coronavirus on economies will not be over quickly because there’s been a lot of damage. A gigantic amount of debt has been added and another stock market rout looks imminent,” said veteran investor Jim Rogers.
From a short-term perspective, the cryptocurrency appears on track to extend the recent rally from lows under $4,000.
Bitcoin has created a pennant pattern on the daily chart, which comprises trendlines connecting higher lows and lower highs. Pennants are considered continuation patterns, meaning they tend to accelerate the preceding bearish or bullish move.
In this case, the pennant has appeared following a rise and could end up paving way for further gains.
A high-volume UTC close above $6,750 would confirm a pennant breakout and open the doors to a re-test of highs near $8,000 seen on March 12.
The outlook, however, would turn bearish if the pennant is breached to the downside. In that case, more sellers may join the market, pushing prices down to $5,000.
Disclosure: The author holds no cryptocurrency at the time of writing.