Insights, news and analysis for the professional investor February 20, 2022 Supported by Prices as of 2/20/22 @ 12:00 p.m. UTC Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up here.
Welcome to Crypto Long & Short.
BlackRock is reportedly looking at allowing its customers to transact with cryptocurrencies on its Aladdin platform. Bitcoin on exchanges have been falling steadily for nearly a month. Miners have sold a little bit of their bitcoin inventory in recent days. How are all three stories connected? That's what George Kaloudis, research analyst at CoinDesk, explores in this week's newsletter. George will be writing the weekly briefings going forward, where he'll use his sharp eye and strong quantitative skills to explain bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies from a markets professional's perspective. These will quickly become required reading on every crypto trading desk in the world!
– Lawrence Lewitinn, managing editor for global capital markets
Buy bitcoin and 100+ cryptocurrencies with 20+ fiat currencies. New users can enjoy 0% credit/debit card fees on all crypto purchases made in their first 30 days. Download the Crypto.com App now.
Like peering inside a house through different windows, reading any one news story or data point may offer a useful perspective on the crypto markets, but none on its own can give you the full picture. For Crypto Long & Short this week, I wanted to take three seemingly unconnected stories from the last week or so and tie them together.
Aladdin's magic carpet
Maybe crypto's total market cap settling somewhere between $1.5 trillion and $3.0 trillion for the last year or so changed minds at BlackRock. Maybe it was Jump Trading finally diving into crypto in September. Maybe enough Zoomers pestered their high-net-worth parents about cryptocurrencies at dinner tables until it hit a tipping point. Whatever the catalyst, I think the news is far more important than people are giving it credit for. BlackRock wouldn't explore something if there wasn't demand for it. On top of that, Aladdin powers the back office for at least $20 trillion of assets, equivalent to 10% of global stocks and bonds. Most importantly, you can't ignore the gravity that could eventually be BlackRock signaling that "crypto is OK."
Where is this bitcoin going? This sort of stuff happens in cycles for bitcoin. Sometimes investors want to de-risk and sell coins, so inflows to exchanges spike. Other times, investors want to hold, so outflows from exchanges to more permanent ("cold") storage spike. It's no surprise that this three-week period of outflows happened during bitcoin's run-up from $33,000 to $45,000 because fewer bitcoins on exchanges theoretically eases selling pressure.
So is anyone selling bitcoin?
Yet, despite Marathon's tweet, miners did mostly sell coins starting Feb. 5 through this weekend following accumulation since Nov. 19. But to call this activity "worrying" seems mistaken. Shorter periods of net selling from miners isn't really associated with the type of price weakness that would worry a seasoned investor. To boot, the last prolonged period of net selling by miners was from January to March 2021, a period which was punctuated by astounding price performance and the first time bitcoin broke $60,000. Everything is delicately tied together
Some people think bitcoiners are attempting to rebuild the financial system with code, and that along the way these coders are learning why things are the way they are. I partially agree, but I mostly disagree. Bitcoin is different and the system these devs are building is in its own category. This is precisely why it makes total sense that BlackRock is getting involved in bitcoin and other cryptos.
– George Kaloudis, research analyst
Off-exchange settlement in a trustless trading environment means unleashing maximum capital efficiency and more aggressive investment strategies.
ClearLoop brings Copper's custody and leading digital asset exchanges into one secure trading loop where funds are delegated, not moved. Balances are immediately available for trading and settlement is instant, with capital ready to be redeployed in milliseconds.
ClearLoop is the institutional investor's unfair advantage, offering greater control during high volatility while mitigating counterparty risk.
Takeaways Venture giant Sequoia Capital is looking to raise $600 million for a crypto-focused fund. TAKEAWAY: While most crypto venture firms are focused on seed investments and presales, Sequoia's fund will invest in liquid tokens and post-launch projects. The approach includes becoming active within DeFi through staking, voting and providing liquidity for portfolio companies. While Sequoia invests across many industries, 20% of its investments went into crypto during 2021.
Backers of The Graph launched a $205 million ecosystem fund for builders utilizing the data indexing protocol. TAKEAWAY: Similar to how many layer 1 protocols have used ecosystem funds, The Graph is looking to incentivize developers to use its tooling throughout Web3. The protocol is currently expanding beyond Ethereum and looking to make a big push into decentralizing the back end of DeFi projects.
Circle doubled in value under a new Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) deal with Concord Acquisition Corp. TAKEAWAY: After initially agreeing to a $4.5 billion valuation in July 2021, Circle created a new deal that doubled its valuation in just over seven months. Circle's stablecoin, USDC, has also doubled in circulating supply and taken a large percent of market share from USDT.
Gary Gensler, chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, pitched his vision for regulating crypto to House Democrats. TAKEAWAY: Gensler doubled down on his claims that most tokens he sees are securities and that the SEC will work to close loopholes within the crypto industry. The chairman also compared cryptocurrencies to the subprime mortgage crisis and claimed the industry is "more centralized and less new" than it admits.
– Teddy Oosterbaan, research analyst
Podcasts Worth Listening To Does El Salvador's Bitcoin Adoption Threaten the US Dollar? Plus, the latest from Ukraine and Canada.
Music Meets Money: How R&B Legend Mario Is Getting the Bag How blockchain tech is enabling direct fan-to-artist relationships and can bring the power back to the artists.
The Freedom of NFTs, Featuring Damon Dash The opportunities for artists are endless in the world of non-fungible tokens.
All things Ethereum. What advisers need to know.
Crypto Long & Short A newsletter from CoinDesk Were you forwarded this newsletter? Sign up here. Copyright © 2021 CoinDesk, All rights reserved. 250 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10003, USA |
Donations
BTC: bc1qxv3stg0xha9upurf7h4aqnmg3xjn3h0zk28kpe
ETH: 0x01870296774Fb0A2DbF9b44d2E6a57fb8Ccea070
LTC: LQ44CP6xDDkX5bAiKd3yqmDB4c23U7orrQ
DOGE: DCpu9v1bkTXj8VKUDG97LHdV2qipDPyZsR
ADA: addr1qx4q7348dv2ju5zshee9ru23ssmqhyyjlnxe0xlezjq5we42par2w6c49eg9p0nj28c4rppkpwgf9lxdj7dlj9ypganqtmuu2p
domingo, 20 de fevereiro de 2022
Assinar:
Postar comentários (Atom)
Donations
BTC: bc1qxv3stg0xha9upurf7h4aqnmg3xjn3h0zk28kpe
ETH: 0x01870296774Fb0A2DbF9b44d2E6a57fb8Ccea070
LTC: LQ44CP6xDDkX5bAiKd3yqmDB4c23U7orrQ
DOGE: DCpu9v1bkTXj8VKUDG97LHdV2qipDPyZsR
ADA: addr1qx4q7348dv2ju5zshee9ru23ssmqhyyjlnxe0xlezjq5we42par2w6c49eg9p0nj28c4rppkpwgf9lxdj7dlj9ypganqtmuu2p
BlackRock Has Entered the Chat