Bitcoin (BTC) attempted to reclaim $40,000 as support on April 12 after a troubling start to the week saw BTC/USD hit three-week lows.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed the largest cryptocurrency bouncing to $40,200 on Bitstamp Tuesday after falling to just $39,300.
Spurred on by a bleed-out in tech stocks in particular, Bitcoin looked decidedly unappetizing on short timeframes, and those previously betting on bullish continuation were left empty-handed.
According to on-chain monitoring resource Coinglass, the past 24 hours cost crypto traders a total of $428 million in liquidated long positions — the most in a day since Jan. 22.
"This roll over in tech is effecting BTC as well," Blockware lead insights analyst William Clemente wrote in a Twitter thread on the current climate.
The comments echoed those of former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes, who on Monday had forecast BTC/USD dipping to $30,000 as a result of the macro setup.
Adding insult to injury for the U.S. economy and associated sentiment, meanwhile was the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) print due later on the day. Already at a 40-year high, the March readout is tipped to reinforce inflationary pressure as the first CPI data to be made public since the start of the Russia-Ukraine war.
The White House now warning of "extraordinarily elevated" inflation data. This upcoming March CPI print is likely going to extremely ugly.
CPI events have historically tended to induce short-term volatility in crypto markets, making Tuesday's publication time of 8:30am Eastern time of particular importance for traders.
Some, therefore, were considering the odds of downside pressure easing once the data is made public.
Analyzing support levels where large-volume investors
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