- Bitcoin rising despite the UK's crackdown on
Binance is a bullish signal,Fundstrat said. - The research firm also said recent rebounds suggest $30,000 may be the bottom for bitcoin.
- Bitcoin has tumbled from its May record high of near $65,000 but has risen in recent days.
Bitcoin's rise in the face of the UK's crackdown on major crypto exchange Binance is a bullish signal that suggests prices may have bottomed out, research firm Fundstrat has said.
The world's biggest cryptocurrency rose from near $30,000 on Saturday to above $35,000 on Tuesday, despite the UK's financial regulator banning Binance Markets Limited from operating in the country.
"This weekend's price action represents a change in the market reactions vs. prior months where negative news had been taking us lower," Fundstrat's lead digital asset strategist David Grider wrote in a note on Monday.
"Prices rising in the face of bad news may be a sign of the seller exhaustion we need to go higher."
Grider also said the bounce from around the $30,000 level was another positive sign for bitcoin. "This is the fourth time the price has come within the ~$30k range and found support," he said.
"Prices holding the $30k level again may be a sign that we have in fact found the bottom of this crypto correction around those levels."
He added: "We do think this could continue to be a choppy market for a bit as prices reestablish their trend and we could even retest the $31k levels, but overall, we remain in the bullish camp over the balance of the year."
Bitcoin soared in the first few months of 2021 to close to $65,000 in April. But it started to tumble in May after Elon Musk said Tesla would stop accepting payment in the token, due to its "insane" energy use. A crackdown on crypto payments and "mining" in China has also soured the mood.
Scott Minerd, chief investment officer at Guggenheim, struck a more pessimistic tone than Fundstrat last week. He predicted bitcoin would grind lower to around $15,000 before finding support.
JPMorgan analyst Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou told Insider earlier in June bitcoin may have to drop below $30,000 before institutional investors are lured back in.