Cryptocurrency BTC price rises 5% after US Congress passes ‘$900 billion ad for Bitcoin’


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Daily highs of $23,625 for Bitcoin price show fresh bullish appetite.
Bitcoin (BTC) price hit highs above $23,500 on Dec. 22 as Monday’s weakness flipped to see bulls challenge previous levels.

BTC price in 5.2% daily gains​

Data from Cointelegraph Markets, Coin360 and TradingView show BTC/USD returning to positions lost over the weekend, topping out at $23,625 at publishing time.

After plugging $21,800 on Monday, the markets have set a different tone today, with Bitcoin gaining over 5% and adding $1,200 in just six hours.

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BTC/USD hourly chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView
Macro factors combined to support Bitcoin’s appeal, with the United States Congress passing a further $908 billion coronavirus stimulus bill.

“Another $900 billion dollar advertisement for Bitcoin,” Tyler Winklevoss, co-founder of exchange Gemini, summarized following the vote.

Heatmap orderbook data shows that selling pressure at $24,000 and definitive resistance at $25,000 remained, somewhat dampening prospects of a stronger rally toward new all-time highs.

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Bitcoin exchange buy and sell levels as of Dec. 22. Source: Material Indicators
At the same time, Cointelegraph Markets analyst Michaël van de Poppe warned that a dip below $20,000 would not be “surprising” under current conditions.

“People are focused on $19,500 for now, and I think this is a very critical level to watch, but I would not be surprised if we dip below $19,500 towards $18,500 to liquidate all the people that have taken longs at that range,” he summarized in a video update on Tuesday.

MicroStrategy CEO: Last week’s bull run was “other guys”​

Meanwhile, fresh comments from Michael Saylor, CEO of MicroStrategy, cast doubt on the idea that the company's huge Bitcoin buy-ins were responsible for last week’s intense upside.

Speaking on Funky Crypto Podcast, Saylor said that his purchases came in the form of high-frequency batches of $1,000–$2,000, and not a lump sum.

“I was not a green candle. The green candles were other guys,” he revealed.

Those “other guys” may not yet be publicly known, according to Rafael Schultze-Kraft, chief technical officer of on-chain monitoring resource Glassnode. In a series of tweetson Monday, Schultze-Kraft argued that big buyers MicroStrategy, Grayscale and others are far from the only ones filling their bags.

“Do you really think they’re alone? Of course not,” he wrote.
 
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