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Bitcoin (BTC) Price Following Steady Uptrend, Dips Remain Attractive

Bitcoin (btc) price following steady uptrend, dips remain attractive

Bitcoin (BTC) Price Following Steady Uptrend, Dips Remain Attractive

  • bitcoin price climbed higher and broke the $4,100 resistance area against the US Dollar.
  • The price corrected lower recently, but the $4,040 level acted as a strong support.
  • There is a crucial ascending channel in place with support at $4,060 on the hourly chart of the BTC/USD pair (data feed from Kraken).
  • The pair remains supported on the downside and it could bounce back above $4,100 in the near term.

bitcoin price is following a steady uptrend above $4,000 against the US Dollar. BTC corrected lower recently, but it remains well bid above the $4,040 ad $4,020 levels.

bitcoin Price Analysis

Yesterday, we saw a solid upside break above the $4,000 resistance in bitcoin price against the US Dollar. The BTC/USD pair followed a bullish path and traded above a crucial resistance near the $4,040 level. There was a strong close above the $4,000 level and the 100 hourly simple moving average. The price accelerated gains above the $4,050 and $4,100 resistance levels. A new weekly high was formed near $4,132 and later the price started a downside correction.

Sellers pushed the price below the $4,100 support and the 23.6% Fib retracement level of the recent wave from the $4,007 low to $4,132 high. There was a spike below the $4,050 level and the 50% Fib retracement level of the recent wave from the $4,007 low to $4,132 high. However, the previous crucial resistance near the $4,040 level acted as a strong support. The price was also rejected from the 61.8% Fib retracement level of the recent wave from the $4,007 low to $4,132 high.

More importantly, there is a crucial ascending channel in place with support at $4,060 on the hourly chart of the BTC/USD pair. The pair is currently trading above the channel support and $4,070. It seems like there could be another dip towards the $4,040 support before the price starts a fresh upward move. On the upside, an initial resistance is near the $4,100 level, above which the price could break the $4,132 high.

Bitcoin price analysis btc chart

Looking at the chart, bitcoin price is following a nice uptrend above the $4,040 support level. If there is an extended decline below the $4,040 support, the price may revisit the $4,000 support area. On the upside, a clear break above $4,100 and $4,132 could push the price further higher. The next stop for bulls might be $4,150 or $4,180.

Technical indicators:

Hourly MACD – The MACD is slowly reducing its bearish slope.

Hourly RSI (Relative Strength Index) – The RSI for BTC/USD is currently near the 50 level, with a minor bearish angle.

Major Support Levels – $4,060 followed by $4,040.

Major Resistance Levels – $4,100, $4,130 and $4,150.

Published at Sat, 30 Mar 2019 14:51:37 +0000

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BIP91: The SegWit Activation "Kludge" That Should Keep Bitcoin Whole

BIP91: The SegWit Activation "Kludge" That Should Keep Bitcoin Whole

bitcoin’s long-lasting scaling debate appeared to be heading toward a climax lately, with two proposals gaining significant traction. At one end of the fence there is Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 148 (BIP148), a user activated soft fork (UASF) originally proposed by the pseudonymous developer “shaolinfry.” On the other, there’s SegWit2x, an agreement forged between a significant number of bitcoin companies and miners.

The good news is that both of these proposals have a short-term solution in common: both plan to activate Segregated Witness (SegWit) this summer. The bad news is that the activation method of the two has differed, which could lead to a coin-split.

As of today, it seems this schism will be avoided — at least initially. The SegWit2x development team plans to implement BIP91, a proposal by Bitmain Warranty engineer James Hilliard that cleverly makes the two conflicting activation methods compatible.

Here’s how.

BIP141

The current implementation of Segregated Witness is defined by BIP141. This version is included in the latest Bitcoin Core releases, and is widely deployed on the bitcoin network. BIP141 is activated through the activation method defined by BIP9. This means that 95 percent of all blocks within a two-week period need to include a piece of data: “bit 1.” This indicates that a miner is ready for the upgrade. As such, SegWit would be activated if the vast majority of miners are ready for it.

Or that was the intention. So far, only some 30 percent of hash power is signaling support for the upgrade. There is a lot of speculation as to why this is the case, but it almost certainly has nothing to do with (a lack of) readiness.

That’s why other activation methods are increasingly being considered.

BIP148

BIP148 is a user activated soft fork (UASF), specifically designed to trigger BIP141.

On August 1st, anyone running bitcoin software that implemented BIP148 will start rejecting all blocks that do not include bit 1, the SegWit signalling data.

This means that if a mere majority of miners (by hash power) runs this software, they will reject all blocks from the minority of miners that does not. As a result, this majority of miners will always have the longest valid chain according to all bitcoin nodes on the network. Consequently, all deployed BIP141 nodes will see a chain that includes over 95 percent of bit 1 blocks, meaning SegWit would be activated on the network.

However, if BIP148 is not supported by a majority of miners (by hash power), bitcoin’s blockchain could split in two. In that case, there would effectively be two types of bitcoin, where one activated BIP148 and the other did not. This may resolve over time — or it may not.

SegWit2x

SegWit2x (also referred to as “SegWit2MB” or “the Silbert Accord”), is the scaling agreement reached by a numer of bitcoin companies and over 80 percent of miners (by hash power), drafted just before the Consensus 2017 conference.

For some time, the details surrounding SegWit2x were not very specific. As the name suggests, all that was really known was that SegWit was included in the agreement, and that it included a hard fork to double bitcoin’s “base block size” to two megabytes.

And, of course, SegWit was meant to be implemented using a different activation method. Like the original BIP141 proposal, SegWit2x was to be activated by miners through hash power. But where BIP141 requires 95 percent hash power support, SegWit2x would only require 80 percent. Moreover, SegWit2x readiness would be signaled using another piece of activation data: “bit 4” instead of “bit 1.”

This makes SegWit2x largely incompatible with BIP141, and especially with BIP148: Different nodes would be looking at different activation bits, meaning they could activate SegWit under different circumstances and at different times; and that would mess up SegWit-specific block relay policy between nodes, potentially fracturing the network.

BIP91

Now, it seems BIP91 has provided the solution.

BIP91 is a proposal by Bitmain Warranty (not to be confused with Bitmain) engineer James Hilliard which was specifically designed to prevent a coin-split by making SegWit2x and BIP148 compatible.

The proposal resembles BIP148 to some extent. Upon activation of BIP91, all BIP91 nodes will reject any blocks that do not signal support for SegWit through bit 1. As such, if a majority of miners (by hash power) run BIP91, the longest valid bitcoin chain will consist of SegWit-signaling blocks only, and all regular BIP141 SegWit nodes will activate the protocol upgrade.

Where BIP91 differs from BIP148 is that it doesn’t have a set activation date, but is instead triggered by hash power. BIP91 nodes will reject any non-SegWit signalling blocks if, and only if, 80 percent of blocks first indicate within two days that’s what they’ll do.

This indication is done with bit 4. As such, the Silbert Accord can technically be upheld — 80 percent hash power activation with bit 4 — while at the same time activating the existing SegWit proposal. And if this is done before August 1st, it’s also compatible with BIP148, since BIP148 nodes would reject non-bit 1 blocks just the same.

This proposal gives miners a little over six weeks to avoid a coin-split, under their own agreed-upon terms. With a SegWit2x launch date planned for July 21st, that should not be a problem… assuming that the miners actually follow through.

The post BIP91: The SegWit Activation "Kludge" That Should Keep Bitcoin Whole appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.