US bank bloodbath: Bitcoin hits $23.7K as BTC price analyst call SVB dip 'bear trap'

US bank bloodbath: Bitcoin hits $23.7K as BTC price analyst call SVB dip 'bear trap'

Bitcoin (BTC) hit its highest since the start of the month on March 13 as U.S. bank stocks saw the largest mass halt in history.

933f09b1-7476-40e4-8cf9-36e6fb667438.pngBTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

BTC price sees "phenomenal" rebound

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView tracked a thoroughly bullish hourly candle for BTC/USD, which reached $23,725 on Bitstamp.

The move was eagerly anticipated by market participants, many of whom had warned of extreme volatility at the Wall Street open.

45min into US open, and banks getting halted left, right and centre. By 4pm eastern the Fed Funds might be back at 0%. $XAU $XAG $BTC $ETH is the only way!

— Arthur Hayes (@CryptoHayes) March 13, 2023

This came true, with Bitcoin and altcoins benefiting from intense uncertainty surrounding bank stocks in particular as trading got underway.

The fallout from the weekend's failure of two more U.S. banks was keenly felt, not just at home but in Europe, where banks also saw heavy losses.

"Massive move of Bitcoin. Now facing next resistance zone (I couldn't get $21.6K)," Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, reacted.

"Trend is back up, buying the dip on S/R flips seems the game. Resistance around $23.3-23.6K, if it stalls and consolidates -> altcoins should continue."8f76d09c-c705-44b3-9230-efc73510480b.pngBTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Michaël van de Poppe/ Twitter

Trader and analyst Rekt Capital, while previously arguing that the monthly candle needed to close to confirm a longer-term trend break, nonetheless called Bitcoin's dip below $20,000 the week prior a "bear trap."

"The way BTC has recovered within such a short space of time just shows that the drop to ~$20000 was a Bear Trap," he wrote in one of many tweets as BTC/USD hit $23,500.

Further analysis called the uptick "phenomenal," with 18% added versus the local lows from March 10.

Phenomenal #BTC rebound from the Pi Cycle MA and Monthly Range Low support area$BTC has rallied +18% and is now attempting a breakout from the Range

It's been a crazy week in Crypto#Crypto #Bitcoin https://t.co/2bWKwPUlF2 pic.twitter.com/rrG0bsNita

— Rekt Capital (@rektcapital) March 13, 2023

"If $22.4k holds as the new floor, that's all and a bit more that price needs to gain momentum to the Main Resistance in the $24.1k-$25k range and truly break through," trader G a a h continued.

"We could have more price explosions, watch out in that region."

G a a h linked a liquidity chart from Caue Oliveira, head of research and on-chain analysis at Brazilian crypto insights firm BlockTrends.

99c80189-287c-464a-b373-b7847e672279.pngBTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Caue Oliveira/ Twitter

Bank stocks halted as contagion spreads to Europe

Outside crypto, the picture was slowly improving for U.S. stocks — with the exception of some banks.

Related: Fed starts ‘stealth QE’ — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Some of the worst performers on the day included First Republic Bank, which lost 76% to see trading halted soon after the opening bell.

Overall, as entrepreneur Brian Roemmele noted, more U.S. bank stocks were halted than ever before in history.

First Republic slumps more than 60% in US premarket trading as measures taken by US authorities to calm investor concerns failed to provide relief to the regional lender’s shares. (BBG) pic.twitter.com/Jf49izSvcu

— Holger Zschaepitz (@Schuldensuehner) March 13, 2023

In addition to rethinking the likelihood of Fed interest rate hikes continuing on March 22, markets meanwhile were also reducing expectations that the European Central Bank (ECB) would hike 0.5% this week.

Among European losses on the day was the already-embattled Credit Suisse (CS), which was down over 7% to new all-time lows at the time of writing.

c8226f91-cdbd-4aa6-9d3b-37fbcc1230eb.pngCredit Suisse (CS) 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

"The problem for Credit Suisse (and others like it) is that it cannot cover deposit flight by borrowing in money markets. It can only go to the Swiss National Bank, in effect for a second bail out. Will the SNB play ball?" Alasdair Macleod, head of research for Goldmoney, queried.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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