Cryptoverse: Bored bitcoin seeks direction after big bang
Oct 8 – Bitcoin has been distinctly listless in the past three months after starting the year with a bang.
The crypto leader has largely shuttled between $56,000 and $63,000 so far in the second half of the year – a contrast to the first six months when it jumped 45%, propelled by the launch of U.S. exchange-traded funds (ETFs) tracking its spot price.
Market players are now eyeing possible new crypto catalysts heading into year-end and early 2025, beyond broader market-moving events such as shifts in U.S. interest rates and the American presidential election.
Jake Ostrovskis, trader at UK-based crypto firm Wintermute, is anticipating the upcoming launch of options on BlackRock’s spot bitcoin ETF, a new product he believes could attract more U.S. retail money after its approval by the Securities and Exchange Commission last month.
Because regulators view bitcoin as a commodity, though, such options may also need the green light from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which oversees commodity derivatives, said Youwei Yang, chief economist at BIT Mining.
“If successful … (ETF options) could increase bitcoin’s market sophistication and volatility, driving greater institutional and retail engagement,” Yang added.
It’s been quite a run for crypto as the anticipation and approval of U.S. ETFs helped drive bitcoin activity globally.
The total size of the cryptocurrency market has ballooned to $2.2 trillion as of Oct. 1 this year, from $8.3 billion at the start of 2023, according to CoinGecko data.
“We’ve observed a significant increase in institutional on-boarding and trading activity,” this year said Ostrovskis, adding there was a strong demand for platforms and services for digital assets that resemble traditional financial structures.
Notoriously wild bitcoin’s 90-day volatility has fallen to 42% this year from 67% in mid-2020, according to Deutsche Bank data. Market watchers cautioned that bitcoin still showed a strong correlation to other cryptocurrencies and was likely to be among the first assets dumped by investors retreating from uncertainty and risk; bitcoin slumped 5% on a new spike in hostilities in the Middle East last week, for example.
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Source from Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/technology/cryptoverse-bored-bitcoin-seeks-direction-after-big-bang-2024-10-08/