Bitcoin
BTC
$17,387
stayed steady at $39,000 into March 14's Wall Street close as stocks took the opportunity to reclaim some losses.
BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView
Bulls need "miracle" $40,600 reclaim
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD unmoved at the opening bell on March 14.
The pair had rebounded from a last-minute comedown into March 13's weekly close to avoid a deeper retracement.
The week was set to bring many potential challenges for bulls, however, beginning with a European vote on outlawing proof-of-work algorithm cryptocurrencies March 14.
March 13, however, was the main focus, this being the day that the United States Federal Reserve was due to announce a key interest rate hike of a rumored 25 basis points.
Geopolitical tensions surrounding Russia's invasion of Ukraine, along with a resurgence of COVID-19 in China, meanwhile, added to the list of hurdles.
Traders were thus lackluster on the immediate prospects, given what the market had to navigate. For Crypto Ed, the 0.618 Fibonacci level at around $40,400 was to form a local top before a deeper retracement took hold.
Only a "miracle" reclaim of $40,600, he said, could produce a bullish outcome.
Advertisement
Stay safe in Web3. Learn more about Web3 Antivirus →
Fellow trader and analyst Anbessa meanwhile highlighted a cut-off point of $37,600 for bulls to defend.
On live order book charts, on-chain monitoring resource Materail Indicators further flagged increased sell pressure appearing at $40,000 on March 14.
"New BTC/USDT ask liquidity that just appeared seems to be trying to push [the] price down to the ladder of bids below. Expecting it to get pulled if bids gets filled," the account commented on a chart showing the changes on the Binance order book.
Bloomberg analyst: Bitcoin "cold" against oil
Turning to longer timeframes, Bloomberg Intelligence chief strategist Mike McGlone doubled down on his opinion that Bitcoin would ultimately emerge stronger from the current turbulence.
Related: Two years since the COVID-19 crash: 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week
Bitcoin, he noted on the day, was defying an "ebbing tide" in risk asset demand by protecting most of its support.
"The fact that one of the best performing and most volatile assets since the financial crisis — Bitcoin — is showing relative buoyancy in an ebbing tide for risk assets in 1Q may portend the crypto's maturation toward digital collateral, in a world going that way," he argued alongside a chart comparing WTI oil to BTC.
WTI crude oil vs. BTC/USD chart. Source: Mike McGlone/ TwitterCommodities remained the hottest movers as the week began while oil futures nonetheless began to cool.