Bitcoin (BTC) regained more lost ground on the July 28 Wall Street open amid confusion over whether the United States had entered a new recession.
Analysts call recession for United States on GDP print
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView tracked BTC/USD as it tested $23,000 for support after a leg up on the previous day’s Federal Reserve rate hike.
Momentum benefited from U.S. GDP data, which fell for a second quarter in a row, thus meeting the requirements for a recession in the economy.
US Economy in technical recession as GDP shrinks for a second quarter. Q2 GDP fell at a 0.9% annualized rate as inventories, residential investment subtract from growth after a 1.6% decline in the first three months of the year. pic.twitter.com/5cXb6uNyWT
— Holger Zschaepitz (@Schuldensuehner) July 28, 2022
The situation remained unclear, however, thanks to comments from both Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the White House, both of whom insisted that no recession had arrived or was even forecast.
“While Powell stated that the U.S. is not in a recession, numbers from GDP gave two consecutive quarters of negative growth, meaning that the United States is in a recession!” Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe summarized about the curious status quo on the day.
U.S. equities opened flat, while Bitcoin remained undecided on overall trajectory after reaching $23,450 overnight.
Van de Poppe added that regardless of the state of the economy, BTC traders should not act purely based on the latest news.
“Now we know that the United States is in a recession, does that mean that we should adjust our trading strategies? No! The phrase recession doesn’t represent any variable you can work with,” part of a further Twitter post stated.
Meanwhile, trader and analyst Gareth Soloway predicted harder times for risk asset investors to come, as a deeper recession was inevitable thanks to Fed rate hikes.
#GDP comes out -0.9%. Markets initially sell, then rally as investors love the falling #Dollar and likelihood that the #FederalReserve can no longer raise rates aggressively. So risk on for now UNTIL the market realizes the Fed can’t print us out of a bad recession. #Bitcoin
— Gareth Soloway (@GarethSoloway) July 28, 2022
His perspective was echoed by on-chain analytics resource Material Indicators, which likewise warned that “at a macro level, the worst is yet to come.”
Anybody who thought GDP numbers were going to be good, or believes that the @WhiteHouse releasing a new definition of recession days before GDP was a coincidence is delusional. Signs of a recession are in. Near term, the BMR continues. At a macro level, the worst is yet to come. pic.twitter.com/rv3M2bNZAf
— Material Indicators (@MI_Algos) July 28, 2022
“This meets the technical definition of a recession for the United States with two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth,” popular analytics account Blockchain Backer continued.
“This is a preliminary print, and will be revised two more times. But, as of today the U.S. is technically in a recession.”
Ethereum long target above $4,000 appears
Translating the macro mood onto crypto price, potential long opportunities were becoming clear for both Bitcoin and Ether (ETH).
Related: Bitcoin ‘bear market rally continues’ after BTC price jumps to $23.4K
For Crypto Chase, longing BTC/USD was already possible at $22,300, despite this being below key moving averages (MA) such as the 200-week trendline at $22,800.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if we made quick work of this price void in the coming days,” he told followers.
“I’ll be watching for acceptance above local liquidity to target $4080~ This correlates w/ BTC pushing to 23.2-23.5K (potential long opp at 22.3K~ if market gives). Lots to watch tbh.”
ETH/USD spiked to $1,676 on the day, remaining above the old all-time high of $1,530 from 2018 since the rate hike announcement.
The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.