Bitcoin's (BTC) month-to-date chart is very bearish, and the sub-$18,000 level seen over the weekend was the lowest price seen since December 2020. Bulls' current hope depends on turning $20,000 to support, but derivatives metrics tell a completely different story as professional traders are still extremely skeptical.
It’s important to remember that the S&P 500 index dropped 11% in June, and even multi-billion dollar companies like Netflix, PayPal and Caesars Entertainment have corrected with 71%, 61% and 57% losses, respectively.
The U.S. Federal Open Market Committee raised its benchmark interest rate by 75 basis points on June 15, and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell hinted that more aggressive tightening could be in store as the monetary authority continues to struggle to curb inflation. However, investors and analysts fear this move will increase the recession risk. According to a Bank of America note to clients issued on June 17:
Furthermore, according to analysts at global investment bank JPMorgan Chase, the record-high total stablecoin market share within crypto is “pointing to oversold conditions and significant upside for crypto markets from here.” According to the analysts, the lower percentage of stablecoins in the total crypto market capitalization is associated with a limited crypto potential.
Currently, crypto investors face mixed sentiment between recession fears and optimism toward the $20,000 support gaining strength, as stablecoins could eventually flow into Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. For this reason, analysis of derivatives data is valuable in understanding whether investors are pricing higher odds of a downturn.
Retail traders usually avoid quarterly futures due to their price difference
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