Skip to main content

Bitcoin, the next move might be coming soon



Today we take a look at the technicals for Bitcoin. 

2022 has been a disastrous year for cryptos. 
Today we detected unusual dark pool activities (large block orders) in the Bitcoin Trust Fund GBTC.
What can we expect next?
Watch this video to find and to get the technical insights. 
Good trading!


Dark pool activities explained
When smart money know something, they place large orders in the dark pool exchanges, away from the public eye.
By doing so, they are positioning themselves ahead of the crowds, in order to benefit from move that will follow, once the news or report is made public.
However, dark pool activities do not tell us the direction of the next move. They only tell us that a large order(s) has been placed.
Only a breakout (bullish) about a resistance level, or a breakdown (bearish) below a support level can confirm the direction of the next move.

Trading Risk Disclaimer
All the information shared is provided for educational purposes only. Any trades placed upon reliance of SharperTrades, LLC are taken at your own risk for your own account. Past performance is no guarantee. While there is great potential for reward trading stocks, cryptos, commodities, options, forex and other trading securities, there is also substantial risk of loss. All trading operations involve high risks of losing your entire investment. You must therefore decide your own suitability to trade. Trading results can never be guaranteed. SharperTrades, LLC is not registered as an investment adviser with any federal or state regulatory agency. This is not an offer to buy or sell stocks, cryptos, forex, futures, options, commodity interests or any other trading securities.


From Coinbase

Bitcoin The world’s first cryptocurrency, Bitcoin is stored and exchanged securely on the internet through a digital ledger known as a blockchain. Bitcoins are divisible into smaller units known as satoshis — each satoshi is worth 0.00000001 bitcoin.

Ethereum is a decentralized computing platform that uses ETH (also called Ether) to pay transaction fees (or “gas”). Developers can use Ethereum to run decentralized applications (dApps) and issue new crypto assets, known as Ethereum tokens.


Popular posts from this blog

Super Micro's Plunge Sparks Concerns Amidst AI Frenzy

JPMorgan Chase Faces Investor Disappointment Despite Strong Q1 Performance