Key points:
Bitcoin drifts toward $115,000 into the weekly close ahead of a key macro week.
BTC needs a weekly close above $114,000 to stay “bullish,” analysis says.
Markets are convinced that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates next week.
Bitcoin (BTC) circled weekend lows into Sunday’s weekly close ahead of a major week for crypto and risk assets.
”Time to pay attention” to Bitcoin price
Data from Coinpectra Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD dropping toward $115,000.
The pair avoided major volatility after the week’s last Wall Street trading session, during which it hit $116,800 — its highest since Aug. 23.
“Pretty clear price is being walked down here yet again going into a new week,” popular trader Skew summarized about the latest BTC price action in part of a post on X.
Skew flagged “some pretty decent bid depth & liquidity just below $115K” on exchange order books.
“Time to pay attention,” he concluded.
Continuing, market participants remained cool on the short-term outlook, with popular trader and analyst Rekt Capital taking a step-by-step approach.
“The goal isn't for Bitcoin to break $117k in the short-term,” he explained in his latest X post.
“The goal is for Bitcoin to reclaim $114k into support first. Because that's what would enable the premium-buying necessary to get price above $117k later on.”
Rekt Capital was among those ultimately seeing new all-time highs during the current bull market, arguing that Bitcoin could not have topped out at $124,500.
A weekly close above $114,000 would be “bullish,” he added on the day.
Markets stay dead set on Fed rate cut
The coming week’s main focus was the US Federal Reserve’s decision on interest rates.
Related: Bitcoin ‘sharks’ add 65K BTC in a week in key demand rebound
As Coinpectra reported, markets unanimously saw policymakers cutting rates by at least 0.25%. Broadly supportive US macro data prints cemented that conviction.
In its latest market update on Sept. 11, trading firm Mosaic Asset Company was optimistic about the outlook for risk assets in Q4 and beyond.
“The combination of improving leading indicators, ongoing loose financial conditions, and strong market breadth that includes participation by cyclical industries favors an ongoing economic expansion in my opinion,” its author wrote.
“That supports the earnings outlook which is ultimately good for stock prices at the same time the Fed is set to resume rate cuts. That could make for an excellent trading environment into next year.”
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.