A long-held theory in the Bitcoin market is, the launch of CME futures popped the cryptocurrency bubble.
When the established derivatives exchange launched the product, BTC surged dozens of percent higher in the days that followed, only to crash from $20,000 to around $6,000 within two months. The timelines suggested that it was the futures market that depressed prices, just look at the chart below. This has largely been painted as a conspiracy theory, but a top analyst recently threw his weight behind the sentiment. He that futures are “slowing this vision” of Bitcoin passing $1 trillion down.On-Chain Analyst: Futures Market Depresses Bitcoin
, a prominent on-chain analyst and Bitcoin investor, noted that the ongoing halving will change one core thing: exchanges will be the biggest net sellers of coins. To fund their operations, exchanges need to sell coins, which they obtain by taking trading fees from investors. Woo is arguing that after the halving, it will be the exchanges that are selling Bitcoin. Futures exchanges, especially, he explained. The analyst specifically drew attention to BitMEX, which has become so integral to crypto that it transacted $16 billion worth of volume in a single day. Yes, $16 billion. On this exchange in particular, Woo :“When I look at the long term price chart of BTCUSD 2017-2020, the rise of the BitMEX style futures exchanges has made a irrevocable footprint on the price, we have much more sideways now from the additional sell pressure.”Along with futures exchanges creating selling pressure, Woo added that they likely increase volatility, noting how large traders are incentivized to liquidate the majority by creating volatile price action. Considering that futures are now dominating the market, Woo concluded by explaining that futures trading is slowing down the vision of Bitcoin exceeding $1 trillion, then $10 trillion in the future.
If we think Bitcoin needs "number go up" to exceed $1T and then $10T market cap to make a dent in the world (I'm one of those) then futures trading slows this vision down. Slows number go up, increases volatility. — Willy Woo (@woonomic)
It’s a Spot Driven Rally
Woo’s assertion is one that was , yet times are changing. According to market data shared by traders, the ongoing move, the one that brought Bitcoin from the $6,000s to $10,000 today, was driven by the spot market. This means that the somewhat-bearish thesis laid out by Woo regarding futures is partially invalidated. a partner at Bitazu Capital, much of BTC’s move last week ($7,500 to $9,500) was catalyzed by spot market activity. He noted that BitMEX’s open interest metric hit an all-time low while BitMEX Bitcoin traded at a discount to Coinbase, indicating it was retail and institutional players buying Bitcoin for cash rather than individuals longing futures contracts.Bitmex OI hits a new All Time Low. This rally was purely a spot dominated ripper. Incredible. — MS📈 (@singhsoro)
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