Very few Bitcoins are actually moving, but the liquidity picture could change soon


Key Takeways

  • Spot volume remains low and liquidity thin in Bitcoin markets
  • Only 2.7% of the supply has moved in the last week; 7% has moved in the last month
  • This compares to 7% of the total supply of Bitcoins which are likely lost 
  • Uncertainty is high due to tightening regulation and the macro climate
  • With institutions filing ETFs and launching exchanges, the liquidity picture may change drastically in the future

Market participants will know that if anything is true about the Bitcoin market over the last year, it’s that it has been incredibly illiquid. 

Market depth was thin anyway by the time November 2022 rolled around. Then came the FTX implosion and an Alameda-sized hole in order books. Bankman-Fried’s trading firm was also one of the largest market makers around, and market depth has never recovered since its demise. 

The effect has worsened in the last few months as a result of the regulatory clampdown in the US. We saw a host of market makers wind back operations in the US, including Jump Crypto and Jane Street in May (ironically, Bankman-Fried worked for the latter before founding Alameda). 

We put together a data dive on this back in March, but in looking at the balance of stablecoins on exchanges below, we can see 60% have left exchanges in just over six months, amounting to $26 billion. 

We can also see below that much of the volume earlier in the year was derived from Binance via zero-fee promotions. Once this promotion ceased, the futures-to-spot volume ratio jumped, highlighting that even that thin level of spot volume was propped up somewhat artificially by zero fees (chart via Kaiko).

Indeed, one of the (many) charges facing Binance is that the exchange engaged in “targeted wash trading” to increase volumes. Therefore, the shallow volume could be even shallower in reality. 

By now, we all know this. I want to take a moment to assess the supply side of the equation, however. From day 1, Bitcoin has possessed two qualities which make it ever-so-intriguing: a final capped supply of 21 million coins and a pre-determined schedule at which those coins are released (with the supply cap slated to be hit in the year 2140). 

As of today, 92.4% of the Bitcoin supply has already been released. By pulling some on-chain data, I have plotted below the percentage of coins which have moved in the last month against the total supply. This gives some indication into how many coins are moving due to trading activity. 

The chart shows 1.4 million coins have moved in the last month, equivalent to 7% of the circulating supply. In truth, one month is likely too broad a time horizon. Narrowing it to a (still conservative) one week in the next chart shows around half a million coins moving, around 2.7% on the total supply.  

These charts highlight further how few Bitcoins are actually moving around these days. In fact, if I can use one more chart to illustrate the scarcity at play here, let’s look at this next one which layers in an estimate of lost coins. These lost coins are estimated by Glassnode and are coins which have been inactive since before the launch of the first Bitcoin exchange in July 2010 (as coins from pre-July 2010 are spent, this estimate converges to the real number of lost coins; it’s not a perfect measure, but a good estimate). 

The chart shows that 7.5% of the total supply can be currently estimated as lost (Satoshi Nakamoto’s stash is included here). That means that it is roughly the same number as the amount of coins that have moved in the last month, and triple the number of coins that have moved in the last week. 

Therefore, only a small portion of the supply is moving for Bitcoin. On one hand, this sounds bullish – one oft-repeated mantra within the space is that a dwindling supply will inevitably lead to an uptick in price. But this is only the case if the thin supply is matched by an uptick in demand. 

When we look at order books and market depth over the last nine months, the shallow liquidity is a concern. However, there have been several important developments in the last two weeks that provide hope that this may change. Blackrock, the world’s largest asset manager, filed for a spot Bitcoin ETF, only to be swiftly followed by fellow giant Fidelity. There is also the launch of the exchange EDX, backed by trad-fi giants Fidelity, Schwab and Citadel.

Even the tightening regulatory noose around Binance could help provide a clearer picture for the future of the space and give investors confidence that something is finally being done to clean up the opaque nature of so much of the industry. 

In conclusion, it feels quite likely that we will be looking back upon these uber-thin liquidity conditions in awe in a couple of years’ time. Uncertainty is extreme right now, both with regard to regulation but also the macro picture. There will come a day when that won’t be the case, and things may be very different as a result. But as of right now, it’s thin out there.

The post Very few Bitcoins are actually moving, but the liquidity picture could change soon appeared first on CoinJournal.

Avalanche active addresses have surged 2x: Can AVAX price follow?

  • Avalanche active addresses have increased 2x compared to yearly average.
  • Data shows monthly active addresses recently hit 1.21 million.
  • However, AVAX price has traded lower this week amid Bitcoin’s struggle to hold above $30k. 

Avalanche, a layer 1 blockchain developed by Ava Labs, has seen a steady increase in active addresses over the past month.

On-chain data shows daily active users on the blockchain network surged twofold in June, well above the average recorded over the past year.

According to crypto market intelligence provider Messari, most of the engagement in this period has been around decentralised exchanges, including retail-focused DEX Trader Joe and Web3 protocol Galxe.

Data from Avalanche explorer Avascan shows the network recently hit 1.21 million monthly active addresses.

But can AVAX price benefit from the network activity as the platform looks to reclaim its market share via a boost to its DeFi ecosystem?  

AVAX price outlook

Avalanche’s TVL has fallen from $13.93 billion in December 2021 to currently sit around $1.4 billion. 

Meanwhile, AVAX has traded lower over the past week since bulls hit resistance near the $13.70 level on Sunday. The crypto token is down 3% in the past 24 hours and 5% in seven days as buyers attempt to keep the bears off near $12.50.

As can be seen in the price chart below, AVAX is battling for upside momentum at the same time as Bitcoin (BTC) bulls look to stem bearish advances near the critical $30k level. A new spike for BTC could inject some buoyancy in altcoins and see AVAX/USD reclaim the $14 area.

That could push Avalanche prices to the peak seen in April when bulls broke above $20, with such a move representing a 100% flip from June lows of $10.

Avalanche daily chart. Source: TradingView

However, the daily chart has the RSI below the 50-mark, suggesting buying pressure that pushed AVAX from $11.45 to around $13.70 has reduced. 

The MACD is also indicating weakness on the side of buyers. A flip to the upside in the indicators will highlight potential gains while the opposite will threaten a return to key support range around $11.20 – $9.50. 

The post Avalanche active addresses have surged 2x: Can AVAX price follow? appeared first on CoinJournal.

Coinbase files to have the lawsuit by the SEC dismissed for lack of merits

  • Coinbase accuses the SEC of allowing it to go public with the same digital assets listed and later claiming to be unregistered securities.
  • Coinbase’s lawsuit comes days after Binance’s motion alleging SEC misconduct was denied.
  • Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer insists that the exchange is ready to dialogue with any regulatory agency.

In a motion submitted to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Coinbase Global Inc. (NASDAQ: COIN) has asked that the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) complaint charges be dismissed for lack of merit.

The exchange claims that when the Securities and Exchange Commission accepted Coinbase’s plan to go public back in May 2021, the SEC was aware of all operations, including staking and listing.

Coinbase stated in the 177-page document that the SEC’s accusations were based on claims that 12 of the listed crypto tokens traded on the exchange are securities. But it’s interesting to note that when the SEC authorized Coinbase to go public, six of the twelve digital assets named were already trading there. Coinbase claims that the legal claims should be abandoned right away because the SEC at the time did not classify any of the crypto assets as securities.

Ready for arbitration

In what may seem similar to its push for arbitration with users in California, which was granted by the Supreme Court, Coinbase has stated that it is ready to sit down with any regulatory authority including the SEC to discuss the way forward.

Coinbase also claims that because Congress has not passed the necessary legislation, the SEC lacks the authority to oversee the developing cryptocurrency industry.

Furthermore, Coinbase contends that Congress must enact new legislation to regulate the cryptocurrency market because it is a worldwide, emerging economy. Without doing so, the nation runs the risk of losing its technological edge to regions like Europe, China, and Singapore that have already implemented crystal-clear cryptocurrency legislation.

The post Coinbase files to have the lawsuit by the SEC dismissed for lack of merits appeared first on CoinJournal.

Binance’s EUR banking partner announces plan to halts support

  • Paysafe is Binance’s current EUR banking partner.
  • Paysafe will not provide services to Binance users from 25th September 2023.
  • The announcement comes, weeks after Binance.US announced its banking partners had warned to discontinue their services.

According to a notification to Binance users, the exchange’s EUR banking partner, Paysafe Payment Solutions Limited, will stop offering services to Binance users starting September 25th this year.

The development comes barely three months after Paysafe decided to stop offering Binance customers its embedded wallet solution in the UK in a move it blamed on the complex regulation in the country as reported here. As a result Binance suspended GBP deposits and withdrawals for all users on May 22. At the time, the UK had just unveiled its plan to regulate crypto trading and lending aiming to introduce stricter rules.

Paysafe had promised to continue working with Binance in other parts of Europe and Latin America after discontinuing its services for UK customers. And just as was the case then, Paysafe’s plans to discontinue services for Binance customers starting in September comes right on the heels of the newly adopted Markets in Crypto-Assets Act, MiCA, by the European parliament.

EUR SEPA bank deposits to be interrupted

In its notification to users, Binance stated:

“We are contacting you to let you know that we will be changing the provider for EUR deposits and withdrawals. Our current EUR fiat payment partner, Paysafe Payment Solutions Limited (Paysafe), will stop offering SEPA deposit services to Binance users from 25th September 2023. Following this date, you will be required to use new banking details to make UER deposits into your Binance Fiat wallet and may be required to accept new terms and conditions.”

While Binance promises to find a new payment partner for EUR settlements, Binance.US, its US subsidiary has also been having issues with its banking partners who had issued a warning that they would stop offering USD banking services. Although Binance.US reached an agreement with the banking partners and announced the resumption of USD withdrawals, the exchange was quick to note that the solution may not last long.

The issues with banking partners come at a time when Binance and its subsidiaries in various parts of the country continue facing regulatory scrutiny. On June 26, Binance Austria GmbH chose to withdraw its license application in Austria just days after a similar move in the UK. Binance.

Brazilian authorities are also investigating Binance Brazil for pyramid schemes in the country while the US Securities and Exchanges Commission (SEC) has sued Binance, its US subsidiary, and its CEOChangpeng Zhao for violating the securities laws in the country.

The post Binance’s EUR banking partner announces plan to halts support appeared first on CoinJournal.