Hash Ribbons Give Buy Signal – Has Bitcoin Already Bottomed?

Updated by Ryan James
In Brief
  • Hash Ribbons – a parameter based on the health of the Bitcoin network – has flashed a buy signal.
  • Since 2015, the indicator has signaled average increases of 614%.
  • Will the price of BTC not drop below $17,592?
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One of the most reliable signals to buy BTC has flashed. Hash Ribbon is an indicator based on the health of the Bitcoin network, which has historically indicated large increases. What’s more, in most cases, it has also served to mark macro bottoms in the BTC price.

In today’s article, BeInCrypto recalls the definition and historical correlation of the Hash Ribbons indicator with the Bitcoin price. Next, we analyze the averaged ups and downs of the BTC price following a buy signal. Finally, we look at the characteristics of the latest signal and ask whether the $17,592 level will hold.

What is Hash Ribbons?

The Hash Ribbons indicator is based on a fundamental parameter of the health of the Bitcoin network – the hash rate. In the simplest terms, the hash rate is the amount of computing power that BTC miners are generating at any given time.

Hash Ribbons is founded on the ratio between two simple moving averages (SMAs) of the hash rate: the 30-day SMA and the 60-day SMA. The indicator was created by Charles Edwards, who described how it works in a 2019 article. The author calls it “the most powerful signal to buy Bitcoin ever.”

What’s more, Edwards added two more moving averages of the Bitcoin price: the 10-day and 20-day SMA. According to the author, this allows to increase in the precision of the indicator and reduces the possibility of the price falling to at most -15% from a buy signal.

The procedure for generating a blue buy signal consists of 3 stages:

  1. Capitulation of miners: The 30-day SMA falls below the 60-day SMA, the chart turns red.
  2. End of capitulation: The 30-day SMA rises above the 60-day SMA, the green dot lights up, the chart turns green.
  3. Recovery of BTC price momentum: The 10-day SMA of the Bitcoin price rises above the 20-day SMA, and the blue “buy” dot lights up.

The chart below shows all instances where the buy signal of Hash Ribbons has flashed from the beginning of 2015 until today. Also before 2015, the signal appeared four times, however, the volatility of the BTC price at the time and the gains were so huge that we will not include them in this analysis.

Chart by Tradingview

Signal to buy vs. Bitcoin price

The basic interpretation of the blue “buy” signal is that the bottom generated by BTC before the signal occurs is a historical macro bottom. In other words, the price of Bitcoin never falls below the minimum that preceded the signal from Hash Ribbons.

Historical analysis confirms this interpretation, but at the same time contains two exceptions to the rule. In the vast majority of cases, the bottom preceding the blue signal was a macro bottom for BTC and the price never fell below it again (red circles). However, in two cases – from December 2019 and the most recent from August 2021 – this did not happen (orange circles and arrows).

In both cases, Bitcoin dropped about 40% below the earlier low, and the signal from Hash Ribbons failed in the long term. However, this does not mean that after the blue dot appeared, there were no increases. On the contrary, Bitcoin rose immediately after the signal, but the macro bottom was later reached below the signaled level.

It is worth adding that if the signal from Hash Ribbons now behaved as in most cases, the level below which BTC prices should never fall again is the bottom at $17,592 on June 18, 2022 (green circle).

Chart by Tradingview

Hash Ribbons: average increases

In the next step, we can calculate the average increases obtained by the BTC price from the bottom before the buy signal to the local peak. Taking into account all 9 signals from Hash Ribbons since 2015, we get average increase of 614%. In contrast, in the aforementioned two cases of falling below the previous bottom, the BTC price lost about 40% before resuming the upward trend.

Chart by Tradingview

The above calculation can also be done in a slightly different way. Instead of measuring from the bottom preceding the buy signal, you can measure the behavior of the BTC price directly from the moment the blue dot appears.

A detailed analysis of this methodology is provided in a regularly updated article from HonestCrypto. The table presented therein includes all historical signals from Hash Ribbons, including those from before 2015. What’s more, any gains are measured to the absolute, rather than local, peak of a given cycle. Therefore, the increases shown there over historical periods are extraordinarily high.

Indeed, it turns out that averaged results for all 14 signals from Hash Ribbon give maximum increase of 3584%. In contrast, the average risk of decline is only 10%. In addition, the largest decline occurred after the December 2019 signal and amounted to 45%.

Source: honestcrypto.io

Long capitulation and bottom at $17,592

Finally, it is worth taking a closer look at the latest signal from the Hash Ribbons indicator, as it has several interesting features. Firstly, the capitulation of the miners that preceded the blue signal lasted 71 days. This makes it the 3rd longest capitulation in history. It began on June 8, 10 days before the bottom at $17,592, and ended on August 18. The relatively long capitulation period was highlighted by Edwards himself in a recent tweet:

Secondly, the buy signal occurred on August 19, when Bitcoin recorded a 10% daily decline, pulling the entire cryptocurrency market down. To generate the signal, it requires the 10D SMA of the BTC price to rise above the 20D SMA. This is quite unusual behavior, as historically the “buy” signal usually appeared on neutral or upward candles.

And third, the key level now is the bottom at $17,592 (green circle and line). If BTC defends this level and the price does not fall below, the signal from Hash Ribbons has a chance to behave as in most historical cases. If, on the other hand, this doesn’t happen, it would be the 3rd case of the blue signal’s ineffectiveness. This, in turn, would call into question the further validity of this indicator.

Chart by Tradingview

For Be[In]Crypto’s latest Bitcoin (BTC) analysis, click here.

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