Bitcoin Falls Back Below $30,000 as Range-Bound Trading Persists

(Bloomberg) — Bitcoin fell back below $30,000, sliding along with equities and settling back into the middle of the narrow range where it’s been trading since mid-May. 

Tuesday’s 6% drop to around $29,500 wiped out the previous three days of gains and ended Bitcoin’s second brief break above $31,000 of the past three weeks.

European equities and US futures also fell. Australia’s central bank delivered a bigger-than-expected rate hike to combat rising costs, adding to the risk-off mood in markets. 

Investor concerns about tighter monetary policy and tougher regulations have dueled with optimism that Bitcoin may have found a bottom to keep the token in a tight range around $30,000.

Bitcoin faces “significant resistance” around $31,500 to $32,000, according to Marcus Sotiriou, an analyst at UK-based digital asset broker GlobalBlock.

“This market is languishing,” said Adam Farthing and Collin Howe of crypto liquidity provider B2C2 in a note.

“Without a catalyst to the upside, current sentiment is likely to keep prices rangebound, with some clear and immediate risk of a break lower.”

The declines for crypto came as the dollar extended gains.

A jump in Treasury yields late Monday fueled concerns that rising borrowing costs could induce a recession. 

Adding to fears of tougher oversight, US regulators are investigating whether Binance Holdings Ltd.

broke securities rules by selling digital tokens just as the crypto exchange was getting off the ground five years ago, Bloomberg reported on Monday.  

Markets will continue to watch for signals that the current ranges — $28,000 to $32,750 for Bitcoin, and $1,700 to $2,100 for Ether — may break, B2C2 said in the note.

Ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency, fell as much as 7.3% and traded at $1,747 at 12:40 p.m. in London. 

Solana dropped as much as 11% while Avalanche declined as much as 9.3% in a trading session where all the major cryptocurrencies were in the red, Bloomberg data show. 

(Updates with reference to Australia rate increase in second paragraph.)

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