Bitcoin {{BTC}} tumbled below $62,000 during U.S. morning trading Tuesday as the crypto market halted its bounce from early August lows.
The largest crypto fell to as low as $61,500, now down more than 5% since its swift rally to $65,000 following Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s dovish speech at Jackson Hole on Friday. It’s down 3% through the past 24 hours.
The weak action spread to the wider market, with the broad-based CoinDesk 20 Index down 2.8% during the same period. Ethereum’s ether {{ETH}} continued its losing streak against BTC, falling more than 5% below $2,600 and dragging the ETH/BTC ratio to its lowest level in more than three years.
Altcoin majors also suffered losses, with the native cryptocurrencies of Avalanche {{AVAX}}, Chainlink {{LINK}} and Uniswap {{UNI}} leading with 4%-7% declines.
Volatility ahead
Bitcoin’s sideways actions since its March all-time highs is testing investor patience, but similar multi-month consolidation phases happened every previous bull cycle, including last year’s action between March and October.
Well-followed crypto trader CryptoCon noted that the current low-volatility phase for BTC is likely the precursor of a break-out to the upside to new all-time highs, based on an analysis of the Bollinger Band Width on the weekly timeframe.
Bollinger Bands, named after well-known traditional market technical analyst John Bollinger, represent the volatility of an asset and are placed two standard deviations above and below the 20-week simple moving average of the price.
“This is the 3rd and final low volatility phase that comes mid-cycle, every cycle on Weekly Bollinger Band Width,” CryptoCon said in an X post. “5 months of sideways price action is not new…,” he added. “Missing out on 2025 is missing out on 2021, 2017 and 2013.”
Notably, a similar compression of the Bollinger Band Width happened last October, just ahead of bitcoin breaking out of a long consolidation and eventually surging nearly 200% to $73,000 by March.
Altcoin pain
Altcoin holders might face some more pain before lower-cap cryptocurrencies would break out higher and outperform bitcoin, market research firm ByteTree pointed out in a Tuesday report.
“Altcoin investors need to keep the faith. It’s tough out there, but the underperformance of alts vs. bitcoin has been difficult,” Charlie Morris, founder of ByteTree, wrote in the report. “The good news is that positioning is light, and so when the good times return, there is the potential for yet another strong altcoin rally.”
During past market cycles, altcoins followed bitcoin’s rally six months after Bitcoin’s quadrennial halving, Morris noted.
The last halving took place on April 19, 2024, which would point to a potential rally later this year around October.
“In each case, alts got a little worse before they got better,” Morris added. “If history repeats itself, alts should kick off in the new year, but only once Bitcoin has surged. The good news is that we are on track for a run in Q4.”
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