I should also say that I don't think a B.S. in physics gives you anywhere near what is required to develop fractal or Fibonacci or whatever analysis on bitcoins.
To do this well, in my opinion, you would need a PhD in Finance with a background heavy in algorithmic techniques.
A B.S. in physics means that you know a little bit about all of physics but nothing very well.
while what you say is true, i can't tell if this is a stab at my credentials or what?
a B.S. in physics is what taught me how to model previously unknown things within a mathematical framework stepwise, through a process of hypothesize --> test --> hypothesize -- > test --> etc --> conclude.
a PhD in finance with a specialization in stochastic calculus would definitely be more impressive

but it's not a two-way relation.
but thanks for the backup

--arepo
Not at all a stab at your credentials. I don't think any B.S. will prepare you for it.