Bitcoinâs march to $100,000 stalls. Hereâs whatâs keeping it below the milestone
Published Mon, Nov 25 20248:23 AM EST
- Bitcoin is trading stubbornly below the $100,000 mark, putting the brakes on a blistering post-election rally.
- The worldâs biggest cryptocurrency has risen over 40% since Nov. 5, the day of the U.S. election which saw Donald Trump re-elected as president.
- Analysts named a number of reasons for the pause, including profit-taking by investors.
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Fernando Gutierrez-Juarez | Picture Alliance | Getty Images
Bitcoin is trading stubbornly below the $100,000 mark, putting the brakes on a blistering rally thatâs seen the cryptocurrency rise to touching distance of the key psychological level.
The worldâs biggest cryptocurrency has risen over 40% since Nov. 5, the day of the U.S. election which saw Donald Trump re-elected as president.
Trumpâs inauguration isnât until Jan. 20, 2025, but that hasnât stopped his pro-crypto commentary from boosting sentiment.
Bitcoin hit a new record high last week, with prices climbing above $99,000 for the first time. However prices have since taken a breather, and bitcoin was trading around $98,243.25 early Monday, according to CoinGecko data â up only a fraction of a percent on the day.
CNBC asked analysts for their take on why bitcoin has so far failed to breach the widely-watched $100,000 mark.
Investors taking profits
Andre Dragosch, head of research for Europe at crypto-focused asset management firm Bitwise, said bitcoin was likely being kept below the psychological barrier as investors take profit from its sizable post-election rally.
Bitcoin has âso far failed to breachâ $100,000 because âlong-term holders have started to distribute significant amounts of bitcoins into the recent rally,â Dragosch said in a research note shared Monday.
Bitcoin/USD Coinbase
BTC.CB=:Exchange
94,844.00-2,043.85 (-2.11%)
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Bitcoin
He added he expects the bitcoin rally to âtake a break in the short term as sentiment remains elevated and positioning appears to be somewhat stretched.â
However, âthis could be a bull market correction rather than a change in trend,â Dragosch said, adding that overall, âbitcoin valuations are still far away from being excessive.â
A squeeze on supply of bitcoin resulting from events such as the so-called âhalvingâ earlier this year â which resulted in the issuance of new bitcoin to miners being reduced by half â will continue to support prices heading into 2025, he added.
âLevered to the gillsâ
Mark Novogratz, CEO of digital asset management firm Galaxy Digital, said last week that although he thinks bitcoin reaching the six-figure milestone post-election is âinevitable,â a pullback was to be expected.
âThereâs a ton of leverage in the system right now,â Novogratz, a longtime crypto investor, told CNBCâs âSquawk Boxâ on Friday. âThe crypto community is levered to the gills, and so there will be a correction.â
Novogratz added that heâs advocating investors buy âstraight bitcoinâ rather than bitcoin-exposed plays, such as MicroStrategy which owns a huge, multi-billion-dollar pile of bitcoin in its corporate treasury reserves.
He also flagged that one unknown seller has been dumping crypto in recent days, which could be pressuring the tokenâs price. âThere had been a giant seller for the last week, between 92, 93 and 94. Probably $14-$15 billion of bitcoin sold there,â Novogratz said on air.
Where does bitcoin go from here?
David Morrison, senior market analyst at brokerage firm Trade Nation, said that although $100,000 is a ânice round number,â it âfeels as if it has become a high hurdle, if not a barrier, for further gains.â
âIf bitcoin starts to fade from here, that could be all we get â especially if longer term holders decide to cash out early,â Morrison told CNBC via email.
Nevertheless, he added that thereâs a âstrong probability that upside momentum can build up enough energy for a surge through here.â
âIf so, then that could be the trigger for another push higher,â Morrison said.
Marion Laboure, strategist at Deutsche Bank, said that although Trump has indicated continued support for bitcoin and the broader crypto industry, any prospect of concrete federal crypto legislation remained some way off.
U.S. election and Fed rate cuts are boosting bitcoin: Deutsche Bank strategist
Pro-crypto pledges by Trump include turning the U.S. into a global crypto hub, forming a strategic national crypto stockpile, and replacing Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler â who last week announced he would resign on Jan. 20.
Deutsche Bankâs Laboure said she thinks the idea of a U.S. national bitcoin is still far off, practically speaking.
Meanwhile, major reforms will ârequire congressional approval on time, which makes these ambitious long-term goals more or less achievable, and there is also some potential turbulence of these reforms to fall short of market expectations,â she told CNBCâs âSquawk Box Europe.â
Nevertheless, Laboure added that she sees regulation as âa net positive for the industry.â
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