Bitcoin (BTC) bounced past $28,000 during May 12 after repeating a chart structure not seen since March 2020.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView continued to track BTC/USD as it briefly fell to just under $24,000 on Bitstamp.
A strong reversal then sent the pair several thousand dollars higher in minutes, with consolidation then taking hold to see it trade at around $27,000.
The bounce zone was significant, constituting Bitcoin's so-called realized price — the sum total of all unspent transaction outputs (UTXOs).
The last time that BTC/USD tested realized price was during the COVID-19 cross-market crash in March 2020.
"Bitcoin basically kissed the realized price ($24k). $BTC is cheap," Checkmate, lead insights analyst at on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, noted on Twitter.
Checkmate added that realized losses — investors selling BTC while being underwater versus their cost price — had also spiked to its second highest daily levels ever at around $2 billion.
As Cointelegraph reported, liquidations had also mounted over the previous 24 hours, passing $1.2 billion across crypto.
The other main topic of the day, stablecoins, meanwhile began to divide opinion on the outlook for Bitcoin itself.
Related: Avalanche drops 30% on fears Terra's LFG will dump AVAX next
As largest stablecoin Tether (USDT) saw its U.S. dollar peg slip, two camps emerged, one accusing Tether of malpractice and another confident that the peg would soon be restored — unlike that of imploded U.S. dollar stablecoin, TerraUSD (UST).
"The USDT peg is restoring already, which is a good sign," Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe wrote in one of many tweets on the day.
Commentator WhalePanda furthered the sentiment, warning of "peak FUD" from
Read more on cointelegraph.com