Chart Of The Day: Overbought Bitcoin Heading Higher But Situation Is Precarious

 | Nov 20, 2020 01:48

Just this week, Bitcoin pushed past $18,400—its highest level in three years. However, the cryptocurrency is down around the $17,600 level at time of writing. The volatile digital token has been wavering between a 0.9% gain and a 2.3% loss today.

Bitcoin hit an all-time high of $19,891 on Dec. 17, 2017, but subsequently crashed by a whopping 84% until its Dec. 3, 2018 low of $3,219.20.

Nevertheless, the digital currency has come a long way since then, surging an unbelievable 465% higher from that low. The US dollar's slump amid the pandemic helped boost the cryptocurrency, which is immune to the fundamentals plaguing the USD, such as America’s $27 trillion debt, ongoing QE and the lowest US rates on record.

On the other hand, Bitcoin jumped 150% this year alone, advancing 15% last week. Even severe critics of the digital asset, such as Ray Dalio, co-founder of Bridgewater Associates, and Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase can't ignore it.

Just this week, Dalio a fraud in 2017, but now says he’s "a believer” in blockchain technology—if not the cryptocurrency itself—as long as it's “properly backed, properly regulated.” JPM, like other financial institutions, is currently pursuing blockchain-focused projects.

Having made a bullish call on Bitcoin exactly one month ago, as well as the cryptocurrency actualizing the implied target of its 9-month-long H&S bottom, we think it's a good time to cash out and wait for a pullback for a better buying opportunity.