Bear markets are an inevitable part of investing. In crypto, they are usually more intense because of the industrys volatile nature. As a response, many investors end up selling at...
Grayscale Investments' trust fund GBTC still trades at a 25% discount compared to Bitcoin's price.
Strong inflows into the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy exchange-traded fund (ETF) (BITO) in the past two weeks pushed its Bitcoin (BTC) exposure to a new record high.
The fund, which uses futures contracts to gain exposure to Bitcoin's price movements, had a record 28,450 BTC under its management — worth about $1.27 billion at the current price — as of March 24, compared to nearly 26,000 BTC a month before, according to official data from ProShares.
Interestingly, the inflows appeared in the days leading up to the "rollover" of BITO's 3,846 March future contracts in the week ending March 25.
To recap, a rollover involves traders moving their futures contracts as their expiry nears to a longer-dated contract, so to maintain the same position.
BITO's rolling periods typically follows up with an increase in Bitcoin net outflows, noted Arcane Research in its latest report, while citing the last rolling period due to the market uncertainty caused by the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
But on March 21, it also witnessed an inflow of 225 BTC to its coffers just as BITO rolled its 437 March contracts to April. That prompted Arcane to see a growing institutional demand for the fund. It wrote in its report:
"The strong inflows to BITO suggest that Bitcoin appetite through traditional investment vehicles is increasing."
BITO witnessed consistent net inflows for the remainder of this week, according to further data provided by Glassnode.
The inflows to the ProShares Bitcoin ETF increase coincided with a rally in the spot BTC market on March 25.
On March 25, Bitcoin climbed another 2.5% to over $45,000, its highest levels in over three weeks. Alexander Mamasidikov, a co-founder of crypto wallet service MinePlex, noted that BTC's price could jump to $50,000 next.
"The growth seen in the ProShares BTC ETF to a new all-time high of 28,000 BTC is proof that the clamor for a Bitcoin-linked exchange-traded fund product is backed by an active demand," he told Cointelegraph, adding:
"These positive price trend activities have impacted BTC thus far and a sustained accumulation or investment from both retail and institutional investors is poised to push the coin to form strong support above $50,000 towards mid-April."
Interestingly, institutions have been picking ProShares Bitcoin EFT over its rival Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), a fund that has been trading at a 25% discount to spot BTC.
The issue with picking GBTC over BITO is that its discount continues to grow, which means investors would remain at the risk of underperforming spot Bitcoin, at a much higher rate than the risk with BITO, which trades around 2% lower than the current BTC prices.
Nonetheless, there is still a slim chance of GBTC emerging as a winner. Namely, Grayscale Investments, the New York-based investment firm backing GBTC, has expressed interest in converting the trust fund into a spot Bitcoin-backed ETF. If it happens, GBTC's 25% discount should return to zero.
"Buying BITO shares guarantees you will underperform Bitcoin," said Ryan Wilday, a veteran financial analyst in an analysis published in February, adding:
"And buying GBTC shares likely results in similar or worse underperformance compared to BITO, with a very slim chance of outsized performance in the event GBTC is turned into a spot ETF."
Related: Record GBTC discount may spark $100K Bitcoin price rise — Analyst
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has never approved a spot Bitcoin ETF application, believing BTC is vulnerable to price manipulation.
The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.
Bitcoin's growth has quickly outpaced Nasdaq's in the past ten years.
A potential decoupling scenario between Bitcoin (BTC) and the Nasdaq Composite can push BTC price to reach $100,000 within 24 months, according to Tuur Demeester, founder of Adamant Capital.
Demeester depicted Bitcoin's growing market valuation against the tech-heavy U.S. stock market index, highlighting its ability to break out every time after a period of strong consolidation.
"It may do so again within the coming 24 months," he wrote, citing the attached chart below.
BTC's price has grown from a mere $0.06 to as high as $69,000 more than a decade after its introduction to the market, as per data tracked by the BraveNewCoin Liquid Index for Bitcoin (BLX).
That amounted to around a 64.50 million percent increase in Bitcoin's price since 2010. In comparison, Nasdaq's returns in the same period come to be nearly 650% — from 20.99 points on June 22, 2020, to 171.54 as of Feb. 18, 2022. As a result, Bitcoin's market cap has grown to $755 billion compared to Nasdaq's $28.68 billion.
Bitcoin's history so far has witnessed multiple periods of its strong correlation with U.S. tech stocks. For instance, earlier this month, the cryptocurrency's correlation efficiency with Nasdaq reached 0.73, almost near its five-year high of 0.74 in 2020, as per data from Bloomberg.
BTC's price per token dropped from its record high of $69,000 to below $33,000 last month amid a selloff across broader risk-on markets. The decline was accompanied by the Federal Reserve's decision to aggressively raise benchmark rates against rising consumer prices, which reached their four-decade high in January 2022.
Matthew Sigel, head of digital assets research at VanEck Associates, anticipated Bitcoin to fall alongside Nasdaq and other U.S. stock indexes, albeit more severe. However, he notes that Bitcoin's volatility has been in a downtrend in recent years. In comparison, Nasdaq 100 has been exhibiting more standard deviation moves than its five-year average.
The outlook portrays that Bitcoin has been gradually improving to become a dependable safe-haven asset against rising inflation. As a result, its correlation with risk-on assets, such as tech stocks could decline.
Related: U.S. inflation breaks 40-year record: Can Bitcoin serve as a hedge asset?
"It's correlated for now," said James Butterfill, head of research at data analytics firm CoinShares, told Bloomberg, adding that the cryptocurrency is "quite sensitive to rising interest rates" fears. He noted:
"But what happens in a situation where you have a policy mistake, i.e. the Fed hikes too aggressively, for instance, or they don't hike aggressively enough, and there's an inflation problem. That would actually probably be much more supportive of Bitcoin and less supportive for equities."
Additionally, Joey Krug, CEO of Pantera Capital — a crypto-focused hedge fund, anticipates the decoupling to happen in the "next number of weeks," noting that "crypto will begin to trade on its own."
Demeester cited Bitcoin's ability to consolidate around $50,000 despite reeling under the pressure of its correlation with Nasdaq as one of the primary reasons why it could embark on a run-up toward $100,000.
Related: https://t.co/0qBrwPQCLe
— Tuur Demeester (@TuurDemeester) February 19, 2022
The price target came in line with what Goldman Sachs anticipated at the beginning of 2022. The investment giant, which manages $1.2 trillion worth of assets globally, noted that Bitcoin could reach $100,000 if it takes some part of the market share of gold, a traditional safe-haven asset. Today, Bitcoin's market cap is just under 6% of gold's.
The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.