Bitcoin

Bitcoin: Decoding why BTC fell below $20k mark on 30 June

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Source: Pixabay

Crypto bears initiated a fresh assault on Bitcoin [BTC] in the morning of 30 June, pushing the king cryptocurrency below $20,000. The sell-off started shortly after Grayscale announced that its Bitcoin application did not go through.

The market’s reaction to the SEC shooting down Grayscale’s Bitcoin ETF is unsurprising considering the high expectations attached to it. Many crypto investors believe that a spot ETF approval represents a white swan event- desperately needed to encourage a healthy and bullish price action.

The SEC’s decision on Grayscale’s ETF application was contrary to the hyped expectations in the market. It is thus, no surprise that some panic selling took place after the announcement. Bitcoin dropped to $19,079 after tanking by more than 5% in the last 24 hours at press time.

Source: TradingView

Furthermore, the selling pressure in the last few hours pushed Bitcoin into the oversold zone according to the Relative Strength Index (RSI). However, the Money Flow Index (MFI) still indicates that BTC has been enjoying strong accumulation despite the consecutive downside for five days straight. MicroStrategy

happens to be among those that accumulated a substantial amount of BTC this week.

Bitcoin’s sell-off also triggered higher exchange inflows than exchange outflows in the last 24 hours. The amount of BTC flowing into exchanges peaked at 14,612 in the morning of 30 June. In contrast, the amount of BTC flowing out of exchanges peaked at 13,944.

Source: Santiment

Meanwhile, Bitcoin’s market cap dropped as low as $363 million as the sell-off intensified. Whales continued to offload BTC according to the supply held by whale metric.

The latter continues to seek out new monthly lows courtesy of the outflows. Bitcoin’s MVRV ratio was at -15.36% at press time, a notable drop in the last five days. However, it is still higher than its lowest point in June.

Source: Santiment

Can the white swan still fly?

Grayscale also confirmed that it will pursue a lawsuit against the SEC for failure to approve the ETF. The crypto investment company had previously noted that it would pursue this course of action if the spot ETF was not approved. This means the hopes of a spot Bitcoin ETF are still alive but may not materialize within the next few months. Bitcoin maximalists will now have to hope for a different catalyst other than a spot ETF.