Bitcoin (BTC) stayed lower at the Feb. 9 Wall Street open as a sweep of local lows increased bets of a more serious comedown.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView followed BTC/USD as it traded around $22,700 on Bitstamp.
The pair had dipped to $22,378 earlier in the day, this marking its lowest levels since Jan. 25 and a reinforcement of $22,400 as an important zone to watch.
“We tapped the swing low at $22,500 followed by a bounce. I would look for the bears to escalate the drop once we lose that low,” popular trader Crypto Tony summarized in part of Twitter coverage.
Fellow trader Crypto Chase likewise forecast that Bitcoin was “More likely to go lower if 22.3k is tagged.”
In an update to analysis from Feb. 8, fellow Twitter account TraderSZ showed Bitcoin dropping below $23,000, which he had warned would mean “moving hard lower.”
“BTC - clean break below dashed line then I think we get moving hard lower. Expansion phase very soon,” he wrote at the time.
United States equities were marginally higher at the open, while the U.S. dollar index (DXY) saw a comedown on the day, dropping back below the 103 mark.
"The dollar looks washed," trader and podcast host Scott Melker, known as "The Wolf of All Streets," reacted, arguing that DXY weakness could continue to serve risk assets.
The day's U.S. macroeconomic data meanwhile had little perceptible impact on crypto markets.
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This came in the form of jobless claims, which at 196,000 neared one-year highs and beat expectations by 6,000 — the "hot" result analysis argued was being hoped for by the Federal Reserve.
Weaker employment data notionally bolsters the idea that restrictive economic
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