1. Home
  2. margin trade

margin trade

3 reasons why Bitcoin’s drop to $56.5K may have been the local bottom

The absence of cascading liquidations, 25% delta skew and the margin lending ratio all suggest that Bitcoin price bottomed at $56,500.

The first rule of Bitcoin (BTC) trading should be “expect the unexpected.” In just the past year alone, there have been five instances of 20% or higher daily gains, as well as five intraday 18% drawdowns. Truth to be told, the volatility of the past 3-months has been relatively modest compared to recent peaks.

Bitcoin historical 90-day annualized volatility. Source: TradingView

Whether it be multi-million dollar institutional fund managers or retail investors, traders new to Bitcoin are often mesmerized by a 19% correction after a local top. Even more shocking to many is the fact that the current $13,360 correction from the Nov. 10 $69,000 all-time high took place over nine days.

The downside move did not trigger alarming-raising liquidations

Cryptocurrency traders are notoriously known for high-leverage trading and in just the past 4 days nearly $600 million worth of long (buy) Bitcoin futures contracts were liquidated. That might sound like a decent enough number, but it represents less than 2% of the total BTC futures markets.

Bitcoin futures aggregate open interest. Source: Coinglass.com

The first evidence that the 19% drop down to $56,000 marked a local bottom is the lack of a significant liquidation event despite the sharp price move. Had there been excessive buyers' leverage at play, a sign of an unhealthy market, the open interest would have shown an abrupt change, similar to the one seen on Sept. 7.

The options markets’ risk gauge remained calm

To determine how worried professional traders are, investors should analyze the 25% delta skew. This indicator provides a reliable view into "fear and greed" sentiment by comparing similar call (buy) and put (sell) options side by side.

This metric will turn positive when the neutral-to-bearish put options premium is higher than similar-risk call options. This situation is usually considered a "fear" scenario. The opposite trend signals bullishness or "greed."

Bitcoin 30-day options 25% delta skew. Source: Laevitas.ch

Values between negative 7% and positive 7% are deemed neutral, so nothing out of the ordinary happened during the recent $56,000 support test. This indicator would have spiked above 10% had pro traders and arbitrage traders detected higher risks of a market collapse.

Margin traders are still going long

Margin trading allows investors to borrow cryptocurrency to leverage their trading position, therefore increasing the returns. For example, one can buy cryptocurrencies by borrowing Tether (USDT) and increasing their exposure. On the other hand, Bitcoin borrowers can only short it as they bet on the price decrease.

Unlike futures contracts, the balance between margin longs and shorts isn't always matched.

OKEx USDT/BTC margin lending ratio. Source: OKEx

The above chart shows that traders have been borrowing more USDT recently, as the ratio increased from 7 on Nov. 10 to the current 13. The data leans bullish because the indicator favors stablecoin borrowing by 13 times, so this could be reflecting their positive exposure to Bitcoin price.

All of the above indicators show resilience in the face of the recent BTC price drop. As previously mentioned, anything can happen in crypto, but derivatives data hints that $56,000 was the local bottom.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Analyst Says Layer-1 Altcoin Will Do Big Numbers This Year, Updates Forecast on Near and Fetch.ai

This key Bitcoin price indicator shows pro traders buying each dip

Derivatives data shows Bitcoin whales added to their leveraged positions after BTC price topped out at $42,600.

Bitcoin (BTC) might have failed to sustain the $42,000 support, and for many, this is a slightly bearish sign. Interestingly, the downward move occurred shortly after Saudi Aramco, KSA's largest oil exporter, denied claiming to start mining Bitcoin.

Top traders at exchanges seized the opportunity to add leverage-long positions, a clear bullishness indicator. Furthermore, margin traders have been increasing their stablecoin borrowing, indicating that whales and professional traders are expecting more upside from cryptocurrencies.

The 24% weekly rally that took Bitcoin from $34,000 to its highest level since May 20 was fueled by a 30% surge in the number of "active entities," according to Glassnode. This indicator could have triggered these savvy traders to increase their positions despite the lackluster price performance.

Pro traders are using leverage to buy below $40,000

OKEx top traders BTC long-to-short ratio (above) and BTC price at Bistamp in USD (below). Source: OKEx & TradingView

Notice how OKEx top trades have increased their Bitcoin longs from 0.68 on July 31 to 1.16 two days later. A 0.68 ratio indicates those whales and professional traders' long positions were 32% smaller than their respective short bets, positions that benefited from a price decrease.

On the other hand, the 1.16 long-to-short favored bullish positions by 16% and reflected confidence even as the Bitcoin price dropped below $40,000 on August 2.

However, there is no way to know if those traders closed short positions or effectively added longs. To better understand this movement, one needs to analyze margin lending data.

Lending markets provide additional insight

Margin trading allows investors to borrow cryptocurrency to leverage their trading position, therefore increasing the returns. For example, one can buy cryptocurrencies by borrowing Tether (USDT), thus increasing the exposure. On the other hand, borrowing Bitcoin can only be used to short it, betting on the price decrease.

Unlike futures contracts, the balance between margin longs and shorts isn't always matched.

OKEx USDT/BTC margin lending ratio. Source: OKEx

The above chart shows that traders have been borrowing more Tether recently, as the ratio increased from 2.00 on July 30 to 2.50. The data leans bullish in absolute terms because the indicator favors stablecoin borrowing by 2.5 times. It also shows resilience in the face of the recent BTC price drop.

Derivatives data leaves no doubt that OKEx top traders added long positions even as Bitcoin corrected 9% from the $42,600 top in the early hours of August 1.

Unlike retail traders, these heavyweights can withstand some troubled waters, although neither the long-to-short indicator nor the margin lending show signs of excessive leverage.

At the moment, longs appear confident in the face of a natural correction that occurred after an 11-day rally.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Analyst Says Layer-1 Altcoin Will Do Big Numbers This Year, Updates Forecast on Near and Fetch.ai

Pro traders buy the Bitcoin price dip while retail investors chase altcoins

Data shows pro traders are heavily accumulating the current dip in Bitcoin price while retail investors are occupied with trading altcoins.

Bitcoin (BTC) has been struggling to sustain the $55,000 support level for the past 16 days, or basically since the April 17 record-high $5 billion long contracts liquidation. The rejection that took place after the $64,900 all-time high had a devastating impact on the sentiment of retail traders, as measured by the perpetual futures funding rate significant drop.

However, despite Bitcoin's recent underperformance and today's 6.5% drop, pro traders have been buying the dip for the past 24 hours. These whales and arbitrage desk movements are reflected in the OKEx futures long-to-short ratio, as well as Bitfinex's margin lending markets. As this buying occurs, retail traders are mainly quiet, which is reflected in the neutral perpetual funding rate.

USDT-margined perpetual futures 8-hour funding rate. Source: Bybt

As depicted above, the perpetual futures (inverse swaps) 8-hour funding rate has been below 0.05% for the past couple of weeks. For the end-of-month contracts, prices vastly differ from regular spot exchanges, reflecting the imbalance from longs and shorts leverage.

This discrepancy is why retail traders tend to prefer perpetual futures, albeit with the varying carry cost caused by the funding rate changes.

The current 8-hour fee is equivalent to a 1% weekly rate, signaling a slight imbalance on longs. However, this level is well below the 0.10% and higher rates seen in early April. This data is clear evidence that retail traders aren't comfortable adding Bitcoin long positions despite the 9% correction in two days.

On the other hand, the top traders' long-to-short indicator reached its highest level in 30 days, signaling buying activity from whales and arbitrage desks. This indicator is calculated by analyzing the client's consolidated position on the spot, perpetual and futures contracts. As a result, it gives a clearer view of whether professional traders are leaning bullish or bearish.

OKEx top traders long-to-short ratio. Source: Bybt

As shown above, the current OKEx futures long-to-short ratio currently favors longs by 94%. This buying activity was initiated in the early hours of May 4, as Bitcoin broke below $55,000. More importantly, it signals even more confidence than April 14, when BTC hiked to its $64,900 all-time high.

However, to confirm whether this movement is widespread, one should also evaluate margin markets. For example, the leading exchange (Bitfinex) holds over $1.8 billion worth of leveraged Bitcoin positions.

BTC price (orange, left) vs. Bitfinex long-to-short margin ratio (blue, right). Source: TradingView

Bitfinex shows spectacular growth in the BTC margin markets with longs over 50x the amount borrowed by shorts. These levels are unprecedented in the exchange's history and confirm the data from OKEx's futures markets.

There's no doubt that professional traders are ultra-bullish despite today's Bitcoin dip. As for the lack of appetite from retail traders, their focus seems to be currently on altcoins.

Currently, 18 of the top 50 altcoins have rallied 45% or higher in the past 30 days.

The question is, can the altcoin rally continue if BTC fails to produce a new all-time high over the next couple of weeks?

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Analyst Says Layer-1 Altcoin Will Do Big Numbers This Year, Updates Forecast on Near and Fetch.ai