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Bitcoin tests yearly moving average as $100K by Christmas needs ‘small miracle’

Bitcoin (BTC) prepared a showdown with a key moving average (MA) price trend on Dec. 19 with time running out for a strong 2021 close.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

“I vote we bounce and stay bull”

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD trading at $47,000 Sunday, still firmly in an established range.

That price is currently the location of Bitcoin’s one-year MA trendline, an important historical line in the sand that has enabled considerable upside if BTC/USD preserves it as support.

“The 1yr MA is a pretty important bitcoin bull/bear pivot level historically and we are sat right on it now,” Philip Swift, creator of on-chain data resource Look Into Bitcoin, commented.

“I vote we bounce and stay bull.”

BTC/USD 1-week candle chart (Bitstamp) with 52-week MA. Source: TradingView

A bounce would still leave a vast amount of ground to recover in order to post an end-of-year closing price even slightly in line with previous bullish expectations.

Among them are those of stock-to-flow model creator PlanB, who at the weekend acknowledged that his $100,000 target for 2021 was unlikely to hit.

He added that he would not be abandoning his models, which remain valid despite recent events.

No “Santa rally” for macro this year

The unusual end to 2021 has also impacted traditional markets, meanwhile, with the classic “Santa rally” nowhere to be seen last week.

Related: Analyst lists 21 factors calling for Bitcoin price upside — But just 4 bearish signals

Comments from the United States Federal Reserve provided a short-lived performance boost, but overall, progress has been limp compared to earlier in the year.

“Look as if mkts not staging typical Santa Rally,” markets commentator Holger Zschaepitz concluded.

“Global stocks have lost $1.8tn in mkt cap this wk as investors reacted to hawkish Fed pivot, spike in Covid cases & find themselves positioning into 2022 of already-elevated valuations. Stocks still worth $118tn, 140% of global GDP.”

The immediate outlook was no more favorable, with the Coronavirus Omicron variant sparking fresh economic shutdowns set to last into the new year.