Bitcoin (BTC) headed toward $21,000 on Nov. 4 as bulls attempted to reclaim lost ground.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView followed BTC/USD as it rose overnight to put in new daily highs of $20,683 on Bitstamp.
While so far a lower high on hourly timeframes compared to the Nov. 1 and 2 spikes, the move served to make up for losses, which came on the back of the Federal Reserve interest rate hike decision.
Potential for a push beyond $21,000 was limited, however, thanks to exchange sellers stacking asks at that level.
“If you want to sell, place your orders slightly lower than $21k,” Onchain Edge, a contributor at analytics platform CryptoQuant, wrote in part of a tweet alongside data from the Binance order book.
Material Indicators, which provides the order book data, additionally noted that buy-side orders had been fickle friends in terms of support, coming and going on the order book.
“THIS is why I don't trust new, heavily weighted, Bitcoin buy walls,” it commented.
Fellow CryptoQuant contributor Maartunn meanwhile added that market sell-orders were “still dominant” in the current setup.
“Nothing has really changed, other than a lower Bitcoin price,” part of Twitter commentary stated on the day.
Beyond crypto, one analytics source noted a potential silver lining for risk assets more broadly in the current climate.
Related: Bitcoin seller exhaustion hits 4-year low in ‘typical’ bear market move
The Smart Money Confidence (SMC) sentiment indicator, traditionally used for stocks, is now at "historical highs," Game of Trades noted.
High SMC scores coincide with outperformance of the S&P 500, and given Bitcoin's correlation to traditional markets, there could be cause for optimism on the back of its current reading
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