Kraken Institutional is proud to announce that its institutional crypto custody solution, Kraken Custody, now offers integrated OTC trading.
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Kraken Institutional is proud to announce that its institutional crypto custody solution, Kraken Custody, now offers integrated OTC trading.
The post Automated OTC trading now available on Kraken Custody appeared first on Kraken Blog.
BTC price soared on investors’ ETF hopes, but on-chain and derivatives metrics indicate a limited inflow of new investors
The price of Bitcoin (BTC) has been trading between $29,900 and $31,160 for the past 18 days, causing concern among investors who are looking for explanations for the lack of a clear trend.
After a 25.5% rally between June 15 and June 23 leading to Bitcoin’s highest level in 13 months one would expect investors to become more active and optimistic, but the lack of BTC’s ability to sustain prices above $31,000 and neutral on-chain and derivatives data do not corroborate this thesis.
The current price situation is particularly worrisome because of the expectations that arose after BlackRock, the world's largest fund manager, applied for a spot Bitcoin ETF on June 16. Some analysts have predicted a Bitcoin price of $100,000 by the end of the year, adding to the frustration of traders who are betting on further gains.
It's worth noting that in mid-April, investors experienced a consolidation of prices around $30,000, but it didn't last longer than a week, and the price eventually dropped to $28,000. This movement explains why investors are hesitant to build positions at the current price levels and prefer range trading.
Despite the initial excitement about the possibility of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approving a Bitcoin instrument for traditional finance markets, there's negative price pressure due to the regulatory actions against leading exchanges like Coinbase and Binance.
This combination of positive triggers and a stricter regulatory environment is likely the main cause of Bitcoin's recent price movement, and analyzing blockchain data could provide insights into the network's use.
When it comes to blockchain-based analysis, network activity should be the starting point. This analysis should entail looking beyond just trading and exchange flows. Cryptocurrencies were designed to facilitate free transactions and the registration of digital assets, so the number of active users is crucial.
Bitcoin's 7-day active addresses have failed to exceed 1 million, only reaching the same levels as three months ago. Moreover, the peak of 1.02 million addresses in April 2023 was 16% lower than the all-time high in January 2021. Therefore, on-chain data indicates a stagnation in the number of active users on the Bitcoin network, using addresses as a proxy.
One might argue that reclaiming the level of active addresses back in April 2023 is good enough, but to evaluate the demand from institutional investors one should analyze the network's address count with a minimum of 100 Bitcoin, which is worth over $3 million at current price levels.
Upon closer examination, it becomes evident that the indicator has remained unchanged for the past few months in 15,900 addresses. This suggests that there hasn't been an increase in the number of whales accumulating Bitcoin during that period.
Considering this, along with the fact that active addresses haven't reached new highs, on-chain metrics suggest that the ETF launch hasn't yet triggered a bullish momentum.
To confirm whether the price reflects stagnant network activity, one should analyze Bitcoin derivatives metrics and measure the demand for leverage from professional traders. In neutral markets, Bitcoin quarterly futures contracts typically trade at a 5 to 10% annualized premium, known as contango, which is not unique to crypto markets.
The Bitcoin futures premium crossed the neutral 5% threshold on June 26, just five days after the $30,000 support level was breached. It took investors a full 18 months to turn bullish using leveraged long positions, reaching the highest price point since June 2022. This significantly increases the likelihood of liquidations and panic selling if the Bitcoin price drops by 8% in a short period.
Looking at the options markets is also helpful, as the 25% delta skew is a telling sign of when arbitrage desks and market makers overcharge for upside or downside protection. In essence, if traders anticipate a Bitcoin price drop, the skew metric will rise above 7%, and phases of excitement tend to have a negative 7% skew.
However, the 25% delta skew failed to sustain levels below the neutral threshold for more than four days. The only period of moderate bullishness, according to the options pricing indicator, was from July 1 to July 5. The current balanced demand between call and protective put options indicates a lack of confidence from professional traders.
These findings are particularly disappointing considering that senior Bloomberg analysts estimated a 50% chance of Bitcoin ETF approval. After the recent price rally above $30,000, one would expect on-chain and derivatives data to reflect more optimism, which might be influenced by Bitcoin's price being 56% below its all-time high, or the impending court rulings against the exchanges.
Ultimately, at the moment, on-chain and derivatives data fail to support the bullish momentum to sustain further price gains.
This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.
The global cryptocurrency exchange cites limited demand for institutional-grade services under current market conditions.
Crypto.com will no longer serve institutional clients in the United States after announcing the suspension of the service from June 21.
The Singapore-based cryptocurrency exchange cited limited demand from institutional customers as a primary reason for the move which has been exacerbated by testing prevailing market conditions.
A statement from Crypto.com noted that the platform’s institutional users were given advance notice of the decision to suspend the service. Crypto.com’s retail mobile application and platform remains fully operational in the U.S.
Related: Crypto.com scores fresh regulatory approval in France
American retail users still have access to CFTC-regulated cryptocurrency derivatives trading as well as its UpDown Options offering, which allows users to open long or short trading positions on future movements of various cryptocurrencies.
Crypto.com remains open to a potential relaunch of its institutional exchange in the U.S.
While it closes the curtain on its U.S. institutional offering, Crypto.com recently received an official major payment institution (MPI) license for digital payment token (DPT) services by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), allowing it to offer its services in the country.
June 2023 has proven to be a tumultuous one for cryptocurrency exchanges in America. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) set its sights on Binance.US and Coinbase, starting legal proceedings against both exchanges for a myriad of alleged securities laws violations.
The wider cryptocurrency ecosystem has hit out at the SEC’s actions, as the U.S. regulatory crackdown on the industry seems to tighten some eight months on from the collapse of FTX.
Magazine: Tornado Cash 2.0: The race to build safe and legal coin mixers
Galaxy Digital invests $44 million to acquire institutional cryptocurrency custody platform GK8.
Galaxy Digital has invested $44 million into an institutional cryptocurrency custody platform to tap into its proprietary asset storage and management capabilities.
Mike Novogratz’s cryptocurrency investment firm has completed the acquisition of GK8, which has developed its own patent cryptocurrency custody technology aimed at giving secure asset management for institutional users.
The service specializes in providing cold vault technology that allows the execution of transactions without internet connectivity. Its in-house multi-party computation (MPC) vault provides the ability to automate transactions, and the service also provides access to Decentralized Finance (DeFi) networks, tokenization, NFT and trading.
A statement from Novogratz highlighted increased investor demand for custody services as a key reason behind the acquisition. GK8’s cold storage solutions and wallet technology will be onboarded into Galaxy Digital’s upcoming prime brokerage platform GalaxyOne.
The business deal will see Galaxy add an office in Tel Aviv to its organization, with nearly 40 GK8 employees becoming part of the wider group. GK8 founders Lior Lamesh and Shahar Shamai stay on through the acquisition to lead Galaxy’s custodial technologies offering.
Related: Mike Novogratz calls Helios a ‘transformative acquisition’ for Galaxy
GalaxyOne is touted to offer a broad range of cryptocurrency financial services to institutional-grade users on its launch. This will include trading, lending, derivatives, cross-portfolio margining as well as custodial offerings managed by GK8.
Galaxy doubled down on its investments into the cryptocurrency mining sector in December 2022, announcing a $65 million acquisition of Argo Blockchain’s main mining operation. The mining firm had to sell off its Helios mining facility to avoid bankruptcy during a tough year for the sector.
Strong corporate earnings and investors’ anticipation of a Federal Reserve pivot are helping to cement the case for risk assets like Bitcoin.
Bitcoin (BTC) price broke above $22,500 on Jan. 20 and has since been able to defend that level — accumulating 40.5% gains in the month of January. The move accompanied improvements in the stock market, which also rallied after China dropped COVID-19 restrictions after three years of strict pandemic controls.
E-commerce and entertainment companies lead as the year-to-date market performers. Warner Bros (WBD) added 54%, Shopify (SHOP) 42%, MercadoLibre (MELI) 41%, Carnival Corp (CCL) 35% and Paramount Global (PARA) managed a gain 35% so far. Corporate earnings continue to attract investors' inflow and attention after oil-producer Chevron posted the second-largest annual profit ever recorded, at $36.5 billion.
More importantly, analysts expect Apple (AAPL) to post a mind-boggling $96 billion in earnings for its 2022 on Feb. 2. The $2.3 trillion tech company results vastly surpasses the $67.4 billion profit that Microsoft (MSFT) reported in 2022. Strong earnings also help to validate the current stock valuations, but they do not necessarily guarantee a brighter future for the economy.
A more favorable scenario for risk assets came largely from a decline in leading economic indicators, including homebuilder, trucking surveys and contracting Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), according to Evercore ISI's senior managing director, Julian Emanuel.
According to the research from financial services firm Matrixport, American institutional investors represent some 85% of the recent purchasing activity. This means large players are "not giving up on crypto." The study considers the returns occurring during U.S. trading hours but expects the outperformance of altcoins relative to Bitcoin.
From one side, Bitcoin bulls have reasons to celebrate after its price recovered 49% from the $15,500 low on Nov. 21, but bears still have the upper hand on a larger time frame since BTC is down 39% in 12 months.
Let's look at Bitcoin derivatives metrics to better understand how professional traders are positioned in the current market conditions.
The USD Coin (USDC) premium is a good gauge of China-based crypto retail trader demand. It measures the difference between China-based peer-to-peer trades and the United States dollar.
Excessive buying demand tends to pressure the indicator above fair value at 100%, and during bearish markets, the stablecoin's market offer is flooded, causing a 4% or higher discount.
Currently, the USDC premium stands at 3.7%, down from a 1% discount two weeks prior, indicating much stronger demand for stablecoin buying in Asia. The indicator shifted gears after the 9% rally on Jan. 21, causing excessive demand from retail traders.
However, one should dive into BTC futures markets to understand how professional traders are positioned.
Retail traders usually avoid quarterly futures due to their price difference from spot markets. Meanwhile, professional traders prefer these instruments because they prevent the fluctuation of funding rates in a perpetual futures contract.
The three-month futures annualized premium should trade between +4% to +8% in healthy markets to cover costs and associated risks. Thus, when the futures trade below such a range, it shows a lack of confidence from leverage buyers — typically, a bearish indicator.
The chart shows positive momentum for the Bitcoin futures premium after the basis indicator broke above the 4% threshold on Jan. 21 — the highest in five months. This movement represents a drastic change from the bearish sentiment presented by the futures' discount (backwardation) present until late 2022.
Related: Bitcoin price is up, but BTC mining stocks could remain vulnerable throughout 2023
While Bitcoin’s 40.5% gain in 2023 look promising, the fact that the Nasdaq tech-heavy index rallied 10% in the same period raises suspicions. For instance, the street consensus is a pivot on the Federal Reserve (FED) quantitative tightening policy at some point in 2023 — meaning interest rates would no longer be increased.
Bitcoin derivatives and stablecoin demand exited the panic levels but if the FED's expected soft landing takes place, the risk of a recessionary environment will limit stock markets' performance and hurt Bitcoin's “inflation protection” appeal.
Currently, the odds favor bulls as leading economic indicators show a moderate correction — enough to ease the inflation but not especially concerning as solid corporate earnings confirm.
The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.
Binance stressed that credit and debit card payments will continue to be accepted and that non-USD bank transfers would still be processed through the SWIFT payment system.
Binance has informed its retail customer base of a potential incoming service disruption that may halt on and off-ramp bank payment transfers.
The service disruption will impact users of U.S Dollar-held bank accounts that are looking to buy or sell cryptocurrencies for less than $100,000 via the SWIFT payment system. The disruption will take effect on February 1.
Binance announced the news to its “Binancians” by email on January 21, stressing that they’re now “actively seeking” a new SWIFT (USD) partner to avoid service disruptions for future bank payment transfers.
The cryptocurrency exchange added that this was the banking partner’s decision and that Binance wouldn’t be the only trading platform impacted by the change:
“This is the case for all of their crypto exchange clients. Please be advised that until we are able to find an alternative solution, you may not be able to use your bank account to buy or sell crypto with USD via SWIFT with a value of less than $100,000 USD after February 1st, 2023.”
Binance did however stress that customers would still be able to use their credit or debit card to buy or sell cryptocurrencies, and that payments to or from third-party exchanges would still be processed.
The cryptocurrency exchange added that SWIFT-based transfers would remain in operation for non-USD bank transfers, such as the Euro.
Related: Binance suspends trader’s account after complaints on Twitter
Binance confirmed the change wouldn’t impact its “Corporate Accounts.”
The banking partner involved is Signature Bank, according to a Jan. 21 report by Bloomberg. The bank set the minimum transaction limit of $100,000 in effort to decrease its exposure to the digital asset market, Bloomberg explained.
While payment service disruption wasn’t Binance’s decision, the trading platform has suspended transfers in recent times.
Binance recently imposed a temporarily suspension on Solana-based USDT and USDC deposits on November 17.
While the exchange also temporarily suspended Ether (ETH) and wrapped-Ether (wETH) deposits and withdrawals for about 10 days ahead of the Ethereum Merge.
Update 12:50am UTC time on January 22: Added a statement from Bloomberg.