With that, the pair narrowly avoided its first-ever monthly close below a previous halving cycle's all-time high. On Bitstamp in November 2017, Bitcoin reached approximately $19,770.
The success was at best touch-and-go for a market which nonetheless sealed its worst monthly losses since September 2011, these coming in at around 37.3%. It was also short lived, with BTC/USD diving toward $19,000 at the time of writing on July 1.
"Steadily carving out a cycle bottom here," Philip Swift, indicator creator and analyst at trading suite Decentrader summarized in part of Twitter comments after the close.
Bitcoin's weakness came as United States equities saw dismal results of their own. Q2 2022, commentators noted, was the worst since 1970 for the S&P 500, while the Nasdaq saw its weakest H1 since 1998.
"Adjusted for inflation, 2022 first half S&P 500 down 25-26%, and Nasdaq down 34-35%, Bitcoin down 64-65%," Big Short investor Michael J. Burry reacted.
"That was multiple compression. Next up, earnings compression. So, maybe halfway there."
Burry had previously forecast that U.S. monetary policy, currently fixed on driving up interest rates to fight inflation, would be forced to change course before the end of the year.
"Bottoming/accumulation signals everywhere, Major funds/lenders going bust, Worst quarter ever, Nocoiner haters dunking on us, Whole timeline saying this time is different," William Clemente, lead insights analyst at Blockware, told Twitter followers.
"If we are finding an accumulation zone, will likely still see months of boring & capitulation through time."
Coinbase Pro buyers step up, metric suggests
Among institutional investors, however, there was fresh evidence that BTC was a "buy" at $20,000.
As noted by on-chain anaytics platform CryptoQuant, the so-called "Coinbase Premium" returned to positive territory for the first time in two months on June 30.
The Premium is the difference between the BTC price on major exchange Binance and U.S. exchange Coinbase's institutional arm, Coinbase Pro.
When positive, it means that investors are paying more on Coinbase Pro, suggesting heightened demand. The Premium stood at 0.217 as of June 30.
"This uptick does not indicate a bull run but obviously, it tells us there are institutional buyers in this price range," CryptoQuant's CEO, Ki Young Ju, commented on the data.
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.
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