CRYPTO: Bitcoin - Collapses Over 4% As Risk Starts The Week Under Pressure

Dec-01 02:27

Bitcoin had a range over the weekend of $90,219.28k - $91,968.70k, Asia is currently trading around $87,200k, -4.40%. Risk has turned very quickly to start the week in Asia thanks to a combination of poor Chinese PMI’s over the weekend and Japanese yields continuing to extend higher as the market prices in a potential December BOJ rate hike. Bitcoin struggled hard to climb back up the stairs and it has just slipped very easily back down the elevator. I really thought we might see levels closer to $100k to be able to fade but at the first hint of risk stalling the Crypto space has tumbled. Price action suggests the move lower might not be quite as finished as many were hoping. First support is back toward the $84k-$86k area, a break below here and the market will again turn its focus back to the $70k-$75k support. The $95-$100k area still looks like the place the market might like to initiate shorts if given the opportunity. 

  • EndGame Macro expanded on this morning's move on X: “The timing isn’t random. Yields across the world have been creeping higher again, U.S. bonds, Japan’s curve, all of it. That’s a quiet signal that liquidity isn’t loosening yet. And layered on top of it is the reality that the Fed ending QT tomorrow doesn’t automatically mean liquidity is flooding back into markets tomorrow.”
  • “This wasn’t Bitcoin failing. This was leverage getting cleared out because the macro backdrop pulled the rug from underneath a crowded trade. The long term story hasn’t changed, but the short term path is still shaped by a world where rates are high, liquidity is slow, and global funding conditions are tightening at the edges.”
  • Bitcoin’s Average True Range(ATR) for the last 10 Trading days: 3,111 Points

Fig 1: Bitcoin spot Daily Chart

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Source: MNI - Market News/Bloomberg Finance L.P

Historical bullets

AUSSIE 10-YEAR TECHS: (Z5) Returns Lower

Oct-31 23:15
  • RES 3: 95.982 - 76.4% retracement Sep’24 - Nov’24 downleg
  • RES 2: 95.960 - High Apr 7 (cont.)
  • RES 1: 95.900 - High Oct 17
  • PRICE: 95.670 @ 16:16 GMT Oct 31
  • SUP 1: 95.510 - Low Sep 3  
  • SUP 2: 95.415/95.300 - Low May 15 / Low Jan 14 
  • SUP 3: 95.275 - Low Nov 14  (cont) and a key support

Aussie 10-yr futures slipped lower Wednesday on the back of hotter-than-expected Australian inflation. This returned prices lower despite nascent signs of a technical recovery as recently as last week. The sustainability of the pullback will be dependent on prices holding above key short-term support at 95.510, the Sep 3 low. Near-term resistance remains 95.780, the Sep 12 high. A clear break of this level signals scope for a continuation higher and opens 95.960, the 76.4% retracement level for the Sep’24 - Nov’24 downleg. 

AUSSIE 3-YEAR TECHS: (Z5) Struck by Strong CPI

Oct-31 22:45
  • RES 3: 97.796 - 1.618 proj of the Sep 3 - 12 - 15 price swing
  • RES 2: 96.780 - High Jun 26 (cont)
  • RES 1: 96.700 - High Sep 12
  • PRICE: 96.375 @ 16:13 GMT Oct 31
  • SUP 1: 96.280 - Low May 15 (cont.)
  • SUP 2: 95.900 - Low Jan 14 (cont.)
  • SUP 3: 95.760 - Low 14 Nov ‘24

Having bounced well on the back of the mild US CPI print, Aussie 3-yr futures reversed course Wednesday on strong domestic inflation data containing RBA cut pricing through 2026. This keeps prices well below prior resistance at 96.615, the Sep 12 high, and refocuses attention on 96.280 as the next major support.

FED: Gov Waller: Still Advocating For A December Rate Cut

Oct-31 21:05

Gov Waller, one of the FOMC's more prominent doves, makes clear in an appearance on Fox Business that he supports a follow-up rate cut in December. He makes reference to Chair Powell's press conference comment that the Fed could skip a cut at the December meeting due in part to a lack of official government data during the federal shutdown (Powell: “what do you do if you are driving in the fog? You slow down").

  • Waller says today: "Right now, we know that the labor market has been weak... We know inflation is going to come back down. Inflation expectations are anchored, and in that world, the standard of central bank wisdom is to look through it and proceed with worrying about the labor market. So in my view, we should just look at what the data is telling us and proceed on policy that way.... So this is why I'm still advocating that we cut policy rates in December, because that's what all the data is telling me to do. The fog might tell you to slow down. It doesn't tell you to pull over to the side of the road. You still have to go. You may want to be careful, but it doesn't mean to stop, and ... the right thing to do with policy is to continue cutting."
  • This is of particular interest since he appeared to suggest he would have a more cautious outlook on further easing after cutting in October.