Bitcoin (BTC) recovered to $30,000 prior to the June 2 Wall Street open as cold feet remained across crypto markets.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD climbing to local highs of $30,182 on Bitstamp after wicking down to near $29,300 overnight.
Amid testing times for equities, Bitcoin followed in giving up recent gains, with Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe insisting that $29,000 needed to hold to avoid more serious retracement.
"Cascade further south for Bitcoin towards the level that caused the breakout," he summarized on the day.
A subsequent tweet highlighted what Van de Poppe described as an intraday "crucial breaker" level acting as resistance.
Crucial breaker for #Bitcoin rejecting. pic.twitter.com/vYdLUlNxyw
Analyzing what had led Bitcoin to reverse downward, meanwhile, on-chain analytics resource Material Indicators pointed the finger at large-volume investors engineering volatility.
"Large orders chased price to the top, then switched sides, alongside whales starting to market-sell. Now, some buying by $1M+ on support," part of an explanatory Twitter post read.
BTC/USD thus remained firmly in a narrow trading range in place since the second week of May.
Meanwhile, one of the industry's best-known figures gave cause to consider that much deeper corrections may not be in store for Bitcoin.
Related: Price analysis 6/1: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, ADA, SOL, DOGE, DOT, AVAX, SHIB
In his latest blog post released on June 2, Arthur Hayes, former CEO of derivatives giant BitMEX, argued that last month's bottom could well have been the bottom that everyone was looking for.
He flagged data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, which presented BTC/USD drawdowns from all-time highs over the
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