More Pain Ahead? Bitcoin and Ethereum Charts Show Mixed Signals: Analysis

The crypto market has started the week off in a sea of red after a massive Bitcoin sell-off from a single whale triggered cascading liquidations across the board.

It’s a reminder that studying trends and cautiously reviewing charts can only take you so far in the volatile world of crypto assets. Every now and then, unforeseen events—a black swan, or a big red whale—can flip the script in an instant.

It was just three days ago, on Friday, that Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell sent risk assets soaring after he opened the door to rate cuts during a speech at Jackson Hole. Since then, total market capitalization in crypto has plummeted to $3.83 trillion, down 2.4% in 24 hours.

The $2.7 billion dump that triggered those liquidations over the weekend had such a large impact, Bitcoin charts are showing signs of weakness for the first time in a long while. Interestingly, however, Ethereum—the second largest crypto asset in the market—appears to be weathering the storm.

Bitcoin (BTC) price: Trend weakness signals caution

This massive Bitcoin sell-off over the weekend pushed BTC down to a key support zone near $113,000, with over $846 million in leveraged positions forcibly closed—mostly punishing overly optimistic long traders.

Bitcoin opened the day at $113,491 but quickly tumbled to a low of $110,584 before settling at $112,429—a 0.92% decline today and more than 2% in the last 24 hours. The flagship cryptocurrency briefly tested the psychologically crucial $110,000 support level and was able to bounce back before triggering automated selling from algorithmic traders.

More Pain Ahead? Bitcoin and Ethereum Charts Show Mixed Signals: Analysis

There’s no other way to slice this, though: The technical picture reveals weakness.

Bitcoin’s ADX, or Average Directional Index, sits at a feeble 16, well below the 25 threshold that confirms trend strength. ADX measures trend strength regardless of direction on a scale from 0 to 100. This reading tells traders that Bitcoin's current price action lacks conviction—think of it as a car engine sputtering rather than roaring.

When ADX readings remain below 20, markets typically enter choppy, directionless phases that frustrate both bulls and bears, making it easier for FOMO and FUD episodes to trigger big movements.

The Relative Strength Index, or RSI, at 42.48 has dipped into bearish territory. RSI measures momentum on a scale of 0-100, where readings below 50 indicate selling pressure outweighs buying interest. At 42, Bitcoin is approaching oversold conditions (below 30), which usually indicates that short-term traders might start looking for bounce opportunities—though catching falling knives remains a dangerous activity.

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