Bitcoin rejects $40K as US dollar strength hits 20-year high

Bitcoin (BTC) made a fresh bid to crack $40,000 on April 28 as Wall Street trading opened to twenty-year highs for U.S. dollar strength.

DXY now in “parabolic rally”

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD hitting highs of $39,883 on Bitstamp before momentum waned, sending the pair $800 lower hours later.

Traders had predicted what they saw as a relief bounce, with the implication that the subsequent rejection would spark continuation of the downtrend.

On the day, caution was advised.

“BTC Currently consolidating in this falling wedge. In case of a breakout I’d be targetting $42K. It’s good to wait for confirmation first if you decide to take the trade imo,” popular Twitter account Daan Crypto Trades argued.

“Only a strong break and reclaim of $40.6k would make me look at higher targets,” fellow trader Crypto Ed added.

“Charts: mostly pointing lower. Liquidity: a squeeze to the upside to hunt the shorts.” 

With limited movement on Bitcoin itself, however, attention was fully focused on the dollar, which continued to outdo itself as the U.S. dollar currency index (DXY) hit its highest levels since 2002.

“The parabolic rally by DXY does not bode well for risk-on assets like stocks and Bitcoin. Until the rally cools off, playing defense is the way to go,” commentator Benjamin Cowen warned.

Others agreed that DXY was now “parabolic,” while trading guru Blockchain Backer saw similarities between the dollar’s current setup versus other currencies and the period immediately after the March 2020 COVID-19 cross-asset crash.

A reversal of trajectory for USD should give Bitcoin some relief, the theory goes, with Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe forecasting it to do “really well” in such circumstances.

Analyst: USD will crumble in upcoming “major currency crisis”

The rampant USD was meanwhile sparking concerns about knock-on effects for other economies.

Related: Ex-BitMEX CEO explains how Bitcoin will have hit $1 million by 2030

Should instability enter the picture, volatility may return to haunt risk assets already at the mercy of central bank anti-inflation policy. Ironically, the spark might be Japan, where the central bank continues to print money.

“Whichever way Yen goes from here, chaos follows,” Brent Johnson, CEO of Santiago Capital predicted Wednesday. 

“If capital flows back into Japan & it retraces to the support line, it’s a rug pull on funds allocated to rest of the globe. If continues to dive it pressures the PBOC to let the Yuan also fall. Neither of these options is good…”

The Japanese yen also traded at twenty-year lows on the day.

“What do Keynesian investors do in a crisis? They rush into the $ thinking it is safety,” Alasdair Macleod, head of research for precious metals trading firm Goldmoney, added.

“Nearly all investors and money managers have been brainwashed into thinking this way since the Nixon shock. This morning JPY slide accelerates.” 

Macleod saw what he called a “major currency crisis” coming, engulfing the dollar’s strength “next” as it followed the fate of the yen, euro and pound sterling.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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