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Binance ‘FUD’ meets CPI — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week at the center of fresh crypto industry drama as the highest fees in two years pressure price action.

Downside volatility is greeting traders thanks to a full mempool, and explanations point the finger at multiple parties.

Largest exchange Binance is adding to the confusion, pausing BTC withdrawals several times over what it calls network “congestion.”

Amid the turmoil, BTC/USD is showing signs of strain, breaking down from $28,000 to threaten an exit of its broader trading range.

The events mark a flustered start to a week already full of potential BTC price volatility catalysts. These come in the form of macroeconomic data releases, including the Consumer Price Index (CPI), as well as Q1 earnings reports.

As Bitcoin network metrics begin to show the impact of current network activity, miners are still selling their holdings, data shows, leading analysis to conclude that the 2022 bear market is still in play.

Cointelegraph takes a look at these factors and more in the weekly rundown of what’s moving crypto markets.

Binance CEO calls “FUD” amid BTC withdrawal suspensions

Bitcoin is under pressure at the start of the week, but not for the usual reasons.

As BTC/USD dips to $28,000, observers are closely following events on-chain and at largest global exchange, Binance.

The latter has halted BTC withdrawals three times since the weekend, citing “congestion” on the Bitcoin network, while simultaneously moving a giant chunk of funds between wallets.

We’re aware that some data are showing a large volume of outflows from #Binance.

This ‘outflow’ are actually movements between Binance hot and cold wallets due to the BTC address adjustments.

— Binance (@binance) May 8, 2023

Binance’s moves came as large numbers of transactions entered the Bitcoin mempool, pushing already high fees even further into territory not seen in several years.

That had the unintended result of creating Bitcoin’s first-ever block in which miners earned more from fees than the block subsidy itself — 6.75 BTC versus 6.25 BTC, respectively.

Attention focused on Ordinals and even crypto investment giant, Digital Currency Group, as the source of the transactions. Later, market participants including researcher and investor Eric Wall revealed a potential source of the on-chain “spamming.”

tl;dr: a hex derivative (xen) that’s notable for spamming EVM chains has pivoted to spamming bitcoin via the ordinals brc-20 protocol causing an otherside-like mint event pic.twitter.com/3u2KHNpEyu

— Eric Wall ‍♂️ Taproot Wizard #2 (@ercwl) May 7, 2023

Binance, meanwhile, came in for criticism from some of the industry’s best-known names over its policy.

“Bitcoin is not experiencing congestion. It’s experiencing high demand,” core developer Peter Todd argued.

“binance can just allow users to specify what fee their willing to pay for withdraw, and pay that fee. It costs ~$5 to get an output in the next block. nbd Good chance @binance has a fractional reserve.”

Binance CEO, Changpeng Zhao, also known as “CZ,” indirectly referred to “BTC withdrawal issues” at the exchange, labeling them “FUD.”

“Bitcoin network fees are fluctuating, 18x in a month,” part of a Twitter post stated.

As the events unfolded, BTC price action felt the strain, with a short-timeframe downtrend continuing at the time of writing.

Analyzing trader behavior, monitoring resource Skew noted bid activity increasing on Binance as Bitcoin returned to the $28,000 mark.

— Skew Δ (@52kskew) May 8, 2023

Traders eye key levels as BTC price hits 2-week lows

Beyond the immediate events surrounding Binance and fees, market participants continue to eye important levels for BTC/USD.

As the pair trends below $28,000, popular trader Captain Faibik is eyeing $27,300 as a line in the sand.

— Captain Faibik (@CryptoFaibik) May 8, 2023

A further tweet on the day highlighted a tightening wedge structure in place for Bitcoin, with the logical outcome in the form of a breakout now due.

Fellow trader Andrew meanwhile bet on the 50-day exponential moving average (EMA) as a potential support zone, this currently residing near $27,950 and already violated on shorter timeframes.

The day’s current low of $27,617 meanwhile marked Bitcoin’s deepest dip since April 26, per data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView.

BTC/USD 1-day candle chart (Bitstamp) with 50EMA. Source: TradingView

“BTC is retesting at .618 after the Binance FUD. This is another Bitcoin vs $BTC moment,” crypto educator Crypto Busy summarized, referring to Fibonacci retracement levels.

“Bitcoin as a network is always stable, but exchanges and wallets need more scalability solutions. $BTC as an asset is retesting due to selling pressure and FUD. Remember, not your keys, not your crypto!”

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Crypto Busy/ Twitter

CPI “good candidate” for risk-on rally

Turning to macroeconomic events, the week is set to be marked by the April print of the United States Consumer Price Index (CPI).

Due on May 10, CPI will be keenly scrutinized for signs that inflation is continuing to abate, potentially increasing the scope for lawmakers to slacken economic policy.

If there is one data release that could sink or ignite a stock rally, CPI would be a good candidate. Coming Wednesday 8:30 am ET.

— Chris Ciovacco (@CiovaccoCapital) May 7, 2023

In April, a slight dip below market expectations accompanied Bitcoin gunning for new ten-month highs.

CPI is just one of several important U.S. data sets due this week, however, with jobless claims and Producer Price Index (PPI) numbers set for release.

Four Federal Reserve speakers will take to the stage, while the week marks the last of the Q1 earnings reports by major corporations.

Key Events This Week:

1. CPI inflation data – Wednesday

2. PPI inflation data – Thursday

3. Jobless claims data – Thursday

4. Consumer sentiment data – Friday

5. Total of 4 Fed speakers this week

6. Last big week of Q1 earnings

RT & LIKE if you enjoy these weekly previews!

— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) May 7, 2023

“Numbers are expected to be ‘Good looking,’ good numbers are expected by market and partly priced in,” crypto trading and analysis account Doctor Profit told Twitter followers about CPI in part of weekly updates.

CPI is known as a volatility catalyst across crypto, but this month, not everyone is predicting upside continuation, even in the event of positive numbers.

Among them is popular trader Aqua, who revealed a broader correction inbound for BTC/USD thanks to what he fears is “distribution” — tactical selling.

— Aqua (@PayneResidence) May 8, 2023

NVT underscores overheated network

The upheaval caused by high fees is already having an impact on long-term Bitcoin metrics.

Among them is the network value to transaction (NVT) ratio, which on May 8 hit its highest levels in four years.

As confirmed by on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, NVT is now at levels not seen since 2019.

Bitcoin NVT ratio chart. Source: Glassnode/ Twitter

Created by statistician Willy Woo, NVT ratio measures the relationship between value moved on-chain and Bitcoin’s overall market cap.

“When Bitcoin`s NVT is high, it indicates that its network valuation is outstripping the value being transmitted on its payment network, this can happen when the network is in high growth and investors are valuing it as a high return investment, or alternatively when the price is in an unsustainable bubble,” Woo explains on his own data website, Woobull.

Cointelegraph has extensively covered both NVT ratio and its follow-up NVT signal metric, the latter containing important nuances which influence how NVT data is interpreted.

Bitcoin miners still reducing BTC holdings

In a signal that Bitcoin miners continue to deal with the consequences of the 2022 bear market, BTC reserves they hold are at two-year lows.

Related: Watch these Bitcoin price levels next as BTC dips 3% in choppy weekend

As noted by on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant, the amount of BTC in miners’ wallets is still trending downward, despite the recovery in BTC price seen through 2023.

“The return of miners’ interest in holding bitcoins for a longer time will be one of the other valuable factors for the growth of the price counties, which is necessary to be attention to in the coming days on the market,” contributor Crazzyblockk wrote in one of CryptoQuant’s Quicktake market updates on May 1.

Miners currently hold 1,826,695 BTC as of May 8, data shows — the least since July 2021.

As Cointelegraph reported, miners faced considerable pressure during 2022, as BTC/USD fell to risk their cost basis outstripping any revenue earned by mining.

Last week, separate numbers revealed that since 2010, miner revenues have nonetheless totaled over $50 billion.

Magazine: Joe Lubin — The truth about ETH founders split and ‘Crypto Google’

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

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