The best way to think of a rising resistance line is as a growth speed line. If you look at the entire coinbase history of bitcoin and you see the upper white line (not the current line, you see that it established it's original support at the price of $109 on Jan 5, 2015. It had it's final underside test and rejection of this line on March 26, 2022 at a price of $48240.
If you do the math what the market is saying is that Bitcoin's value against the USD was no longer going to grow at a pace of 240% per year (that is the annualized growth rate between the above two dates I gave and the above two prices). The market determined, through price action, that this was not a sustainable growth rate.
So now it establishes the lower line that we are currently up against. This line established it's first support at the COVID low of $4935 on March 17 2020. Now on Feb 17 2024 we are at $52000 testing the under side of this line and Bitcoin is trying to break above that price. So the market is currently asking the question: should Bitcoin be growing faster than 150% per year against the USD.
150% per annum is a massive growth rate (not to mention 240%).
I suspect Bitcoin could have bursts of growth rates that amounted to 150% per annum on select years, but as an average I simply don't believe it. That may be naive. Given the trillions and trillions of outstanding USD and the very limited supply of Bitcoin. However supply is only one side of the coin. Demand is the other.
While investors are chasing returns and moving to Bitcoin as a potential safe haven against long term dollar destruction, Bitcoin is still not traditionally an asset as such. It doesn't produce wealth for it's holders as such. It has potential as a store of value, less so as a unit of account, but to me it's highest function is as a global liquidity barometer.
I am guessing Bitcoin's ultra long term average growth rate (let's say at 200+ years) against the USD will match its halving rate which is approximately 20% per year. That will take many years to establish, but in any case that long term line would be much much lower than where we currently are. Perhaps the market can sustain an average valuation increase of 150% per year, but I don't believe that narrative and I believe you should have sane reasons to doubt it as well.
Of course, I am open to being wrong. But I suspect the USD is a lot stronger than the naysayers want to give it credit for. It is still the worldwide reserve currency without any question. Until that changes, I wouldn't expect any long term average of Bitcoin to be 150% growth per year.
Let's see!