Crypto analysts say the weekend’s market volatility is temporary and are predicting an upward trend to emerge in the coming weeks.
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Bitcoin could reclaim its all-time high of $125,100 in the coming week, but not without one more major correction, according to veteran trader Peter Brandt.
“Either a huge shakeout, which would be confirmed by an ATH quickly within the next week or so,” he said, though he acknowledged there could also be a much more bearish outcome.
“Or a violation of the parabola, which every time in the past has produced a 75% price decline. I think the day of the 80% decline is over, but perhaps back to $50-60,000 and test the lower skin of the banana.”
Traders need to consider “long-term risk,” says analyst
The crypto market crashed on Friday after US President Donald Trump’s announcement of a 100% tariff on Chinese goods, resulting in across the market.
After dropping from around $121,000 to as low as $102,000 on Friday, Bitcoin () has rebounded to approximately $112,400 at the time of publication, to CoinMarketCap.
“If anything, this weekend was a reminder you have to be so careful with leverage, and even multiples above 1.5x are dangerous,” Capriole Investments founder Charles Edwards told Cointelegraph.
“They do, and you need to always consider multi-year, long-term risk,” he said. He said the weekend’s volatility is temporary, and described his outlook for the coming weeks as simply “up.”
Other analysts remain optimistic, citing broader macroeconomic signals as indications that fresh capital could flow into the cryptocurrency market in the coming weeks.
“Buy everything,” says BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes
BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes in an X post on Tuesday that a buying opportunity may be presenting itself in the crypto market after US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled that quantitative tightening “is over.”
“Back up the … truck and buy everything,” Hayes said.
Quantitative easing is bullish for crypto as it encourages banks to lend more and for consumers and businesses through lower interest rates.
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Swyftx lead analyst Pav Hundal told Cointelegraph on Tuesday that “the fundamental economic data is the big story for Bitcoin right now.”
“Inflation is facing a double whammy at the moment from lower oil prices and demand, and at the same time, the US labor market is showing signs of distress,” Hundal said, as US inflation reached 2.90% in August, the highest level since January.
“The Fed has a mandate to target full employment, and it all just feels inevitable that we’ll see further rate cuts this month. This is a goldilocks zone for Bitcoin,” he said.
Meanwhile, macroeconomist Lyn Alden recently on a podcast that she is leaning “toward this next quarter being probably pretty favorable” for Bitcoin.
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