- BTC's long-term moving averages are set to flash a bearish signal soon.
- This signal has historically been a contrarian indicator, marking bear market bottoms and renewed bull runs.
If you’re wondering just how much lower bitcoin BTC$62,294.38 is likely to drop, the answer, at least according to one historically accurate contrarian indicator, is not much.
That's the conclusion from an indicator that might seem to signal a bearish shift in sentiment but has tended to presage a more bullish outlook.
The indicator is based on two moving averages: Bitcoin’s 50-week simple moving average (SMA) and the 100-week average. The 50-week average, representing roughly one year, is very close to dropping below the 100-week line. A shorter-term measure is often seen as a more accurate reflection of recent attitudes, so the cross would trigger what analysts call a "bear cross." At current trajectories, it could happen as soon as next week.
While that might sound scary to bulls, it is potentially positive news.
There have been three such bear crosses in bitcoin's history, and each marked a market bottom, signaling the end of a decline and the beginning of a three-year rally. The impending cross, therefore, suggests the bear market has nearly run its course and the bottom is near.
Critics would argue that three past instances aren't enough to draw a definite conclusion. While that is true, the contrarian record of the bear cross is consistent with the reputation of ultra-long-duration moving averages as "lagging" indicators.
Backward looking
Think about the information the averages are conveying. They represent the average price over the previous 50 and 100 weeks. In other words, they reflect price action that has already materialized. The imminent bear cross is essentially a reflection of the 50% drop in bitcoin price from $126,000 in October to nearly $60,000. It has limited predictive power at best.
By the time these bear crosses finally occur, the market froth is usually gone, short-term speculators have exited and capitulation has already taken place. Taken together, this suggests traders are likely to treat the intersection as a serious signal that might just mark a bottom once again.
Of course, past patterns offer no guarantee of future results, and shifts in the wider economy can single-handedly make or break technical trends. Because of this, factors like bond yields, ETF flows and the latest actions from Strategy (MSTR) remain as critical as ever in determining bitcoin's next move.
As of the time of writing, bitcoin traded near $62,400, with the 50-week average at $89,771 and the 100-week average at $88,397.