Analysts note parallels with March 2020: Will this time be different?

Analysts across crypto and traditional stocks have taken notice of the similarities between what happened in March 2020 and market moves so far this month.

Analysts in both crypto and traditional markets have noted some startling similarities between the recent downturn and the one caused by a pandemic panic in March 2020.
The real question is whether it’s the start of a larger downturn or if there will be a significant bounce-back as in 2020 that led to an extended bull run in both crypto and stocks markets.
Podcaster and author of The Pomp Letter, Anthony “Pomp” Pompliano, is on the permabull side of the ledger, tweeting on Wednesday that since March 1, 2020, when one Bitcoin cost about $8,545, “Bitcoin is up 340%.”
Among those hopeful of a turnaround is investment firm Real Vision’s CEO Raoul Pal, who believes Bitcoin (BTC) markets have been painting a pattern that shares traits with the March 2020 crash.
In his Friday episode of Raoul Pal Adventures in Crypto, Pal explained that with the downward price action last week, Bitcoin may have “shot straight down” to the bottom of the current wedge formation and is now in a range that will eventually lead to another rise in price. He said:
“That was exactly the kind of pattern we had in March 2020.”
On March 12, 2020, investors panic-sold many assets, including Bitcoin, as fear of how the market would be impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and global lockdowns. On that day, Bitcoin fell 45% from $7,935 to $5,142, according to CoinGecko.
The current decline in traditional markets has led to a loss of $7.6 trillion in market cap from the tech-heavy Nasdaq, in non-inflation adjusted terms, more than the dot-com bubble and the March 2020 sell-offs.
The 50-day moving average (MA) of financials, real estate and technology investments is close to the overwhelmingly oversold levels seen just over two years ago. In March 2020, respectively, those levels were 0, 0, and 1 compared to 2, 3, and 4 so far in May, based on data from Fidelity Investments. In a Wednesday tweet, Fidelity’s own director of global Macro Jurrien Timmer called March 2020 “one of the most oversold setups in the history of the market.”
The S&P 500 Index also displays similarities, as it recorded a 52-week low of 3,930 on May 12 only to bounce back to 4,088 by market close on Tuesday. Chief market strategist for financial research firm LPL Research observed in a Wednesday tweet that the last time the index had done that was in March 2020.
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