Bitcoin rose to a four-week high on Monday, climbing for a second consecutive session, driven in part by liquidation of some short positions that have accumulated in the virtual currency’s recent three-month downtrend.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency hit US$44 524.18 , the highest since mid-January. It was last up 3.8% at $44 024. Since hitting a roughly six-month low on 24 January, bitcoin has gained about 35%.
Ether, the second largest digital currency in terms of market capitalisation, touched a three-week peak of $3 180 and was last up 3.1% at $3 153.21. It dropped to a six-month trough in late January, but since then, ether, the token used for the ethereum blockchain, has surged about 47%.
“The current rise came after considerable range-bound price action that saw volumes drying and shorts increasing,” said Joe DiPasquale, CEO at BitBull Capital, which manages crypto hedge funds. “Typically, when the market is heavily leaning on one side of a trade, too long or too short, the price can move to counter that weight and squeeze positions.”
Blockchain data provider Glassnode, in its latest research report on Monday, said its charts showed that bitcoin shorts have been under pressure last week, “with a minor skew towards short-side liquidations”.
But it added that the magnitude of the liquidation remains “fairly lacklustre”, suggesting a short-squeeze is just one factor, among many others, driving the rally in bitcoin.
Recovery mode
The crypto market has been in recovery mode in recent sessions, posting institutional inflows of $85-million last week, marking the third week of inflows totalling $133-million, according to a report from digital asset manager CoinShares released on Monday.
Bitcoin led all inflows, with $71-million, the largest since early December and the third straight week of inflows, with a total of $108-million. For the year, however, bitcoin posted net outflows of $60-million.
Ether, on the other hand, posted net outflows of $8.5-million in the week ended 4 February, its ninth straight week of outflows, totalling $280-million. That represents 2.2% of assets under management, according to CoinShares. — Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss, (c) 2022 Reuters