The crypto market is up in the last 24 hours, driven by expectations of Fed dovishness and easing concerns over FTX.
The combined market capitalization of cryptocurrencies has jumped in the last 24 hours as traders anticipate no monetary policy action after the latest U.S. inflation data.
On Sep. 14, the crypto market valuation reached $1.035 trillion, with 1.58% intraday gains, which included all the top-ranking cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH) and Solana (SOL).
Crypto market reacts to Fed pause bets
Crypto investors seemingly liked what they saw in the U.S. consumer price index (CPI) report on Sep. 13.
As Cointelegraph covered, the U.S. CPI jumped 0.6% in August from the previous month, the fastest monthly rise in over a year, with gasoline prices contributing to more than half of the jump. Meanwhile, the core prices, which exclude food and energy costs, rose by a modest 0.3%, slightly higher than the estimated 0.2%.
When looking broadly, however, core inflation remained on a downward trajectory toward the Fed’s 2% preferred target.
The core inflation downtrend coincides with derivative market traders upping their estimates for a rate hike pause in September. Notably, the target rate probabilities for the Fed’s Sep. 19-20 meeting have jumped to 97% from 93% a week ago.
Stabilizing or lowering interest rates has typically served as a bullish signal among crypto investors, which could explain the market’s price rally in the past 24 hours.
Easing FTX concerns
Crypto investors also responded positively to the recent FTX court ruling, wherein a federal judge, John Dorse, approved the sale of the defunct crypto exchange’s crypto assets.
Nonetheless, the ruling barred FTX shareholders from selling Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other affiliated assets.
These cryptocurrencies together comprise about 70% of the entire crypto market valuation. So, their exclusion in the court ruling theoretically reduces the selling pressure that FTX sales may have potentially caused, as many had feared.
Furthermore, the sales of remaining crypto holdings are limited to a maximum of $50 million per week while requiring written notice prior.
— Jeff Dorman, CFA (@jdorman81) September 13, 2023
Earlier this week, data researchers at Messari had also debunked theories about FTX sales leading to massive selloffs across the crypto market, arguing that the exchange’s biggest crypto holding, Solana, is subjected to vesting schedules.
SOL was among the top crypto performers in the past 24 hours, rising over 4% and, thus, contributing to the overall crypto market upside moves.
Oversold bounce
In addition, the crypto market’s gains in the last 24 hours is a part of a short-term rebound that started on Sep. 11.
Related: Bitcoin data highlights 3 key reasons why investors don’t care about BTC price
Then, the market’s daily relative strength index (RSI) dropped to 30, an “oversold” threshold. Typically, traditional analysts see the RSI’s drop to or below 30 as a buy signal. This strategy has been prevalent in the crypto market this year, as shown below.
Crypto market technical analysis
As a note of caution, the ongoing crypto market rebound does not point to an extended buying trend.
Instead, the market risks bearish continuation as long as it stays below its key exponential moving averages (EMA): the 50-day EMA (the red wave) near $1.08 trillion and the 200-day EMA (the blue wave) near $1.06 trillion.
In addition, the crypto market’s multi-month descending trendline resistance has limited its upside prospects since July 2023. So, the ongoing rebound may continue until the market valuation hits the trendline or its 50-day EMA, both aligning at $1.04 trillion.
On the other hand, a pullback ahead or after testing the trendline-EMA confluence risks crashing the crypto market valuation to the $980-995 billion range (the red area) throug Q4.
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.