Crypto investment products saw minor outflows of $6.5M last week – CoinShares

  • About $6.5 million flowed out of funds tracking different cryptocurrencies last week.
  • Bitcoin recorded $13 million in outflows, while Ethereum benefited from XRP-driven sentiment to record $6.6 million in inflows.
  • The minor outflows follow 4 consecutive weeks of inflows.

CoinShares’ latest report on digital assets investment products suggests the industry saw minor outflows of $6.5 million over the past week. The outflows follow a consecutive four weeks of inflows that saw investors pour $742 million into different crypto investment products.

James Butterfill, Head of Research at CoinShares noted that while Bitcoin recorded the most outflows, data showed sentiment towards Ethereum investment products looks to have flipped positive.

Ethereum and XRP record inflows

As highlighted in a report published on Monday, funds tracking Bitcoin logged $13 million of outflows and short-bitcoin products recorded $5.5 million in outflows – its 13th consecutive week. 

Meanwhile, Ethereum products witnessed $6.6 million in inflows, with Butterfill noting that the shift in sentiment around ETH has coincided with the recent court ruling in the Ripple Labs versus US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

US Judge Analisa Torres delivered a partial win for Ripple in its battle with the SEC when she ruled that XRP was not a security as sold on exchanges.

The price of XRP shot up following the ruling, rising more than 100% to hit highs near the much-coveted $1 level. But while XRP failed to break to the psychological 100 cents mark, it appears investor confidence in the cryptocurrency greatly benefited it.

XRP, both prior to, and following the conclusion of the recent SEC lawsuit, has seen inflows totalling US$6.8m over the last 11 weeks representing 8% of AuM. This implies investors are increasingly confident in the outlook for XRP,” Butterfill wrote.

The positive sentiment was also replicated in Solana, Uniswap and Polygon that registered inflows of $1.1 million, $0.7 million and $0.7 million respectively.

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Galaxy Digital CEO: ‘I’m more comfortable being long Bitcoin today’

  • Michael Novogratz puts Bitcoin and Gold in the same bucket.
  • Wolfe Research strategist reiterated his bullish view on BTC.
  • Bitcoin is currently up 80% versus the start of the year 2023.

Owning Bitcoin today is nowhere as scary as it was about six months ago, says Michael Novogratz – the Chief Executive of Galaxy Digital.

Novogratz shares his view on Bitcoin

Interest rates continued to go up this year; FTX collapsed; the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission came down hard on bellwethers of the crypto space.

And yet, Bitcoin has outperformed every other financial asset – now up 80% year-to-date.

What that establishes beyond doubt, as per Novogratz, is that the world’s largest cryptocurrency is here to stay. On CNBC’s “Squawk Box”, he said:

The normalization of 5.0% budget deficit … is why Bitcoin, gold, silver trade great. I put them all in the same bucket. Bitcoin has got the additional adoption cycle.

Novogratz sees Bitcoin as digital gold

Novogratz drives his optimism also from BlackRock Inc that has recently filed with the regulator for a Spot Bitcoin ETF which could boost institutional interest in the digital asset.

I’m more comfortable being long Bitcoin today than I was six months ago. I like to think of BTC as digital gold to store value.

Meanwhile, Jacobi Asset Management is all set to debut its Bitcoin-focused exchange-traded fund in Europe by the end of this year.

Also on Thursday, Wolfe Research strategist Rob Ginsberg reiterated his bullish view on BTC. He agreed, though, that the cryptocurrency has to fight an uphill battle to reclaim its former highs.

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Bitcoin’s correlation with gold sinks to two-year low, a warning for investors


Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin’s correlation with gold is at a two-year low
  • Divergence highlights yet again that Bitcoin remains a risk-on asset
  • This may change in the future, but for now, Bitcoin resides on the long-end of the risk spectrum 
  • With full effects of tight monetary policy still to come, market should not get ahead of itself

Bitcoin’s correlation with gold continues to fall, highlighting the oft-repeated goal of achieving a store-of-value status akin to digital gold remains a long way off for now. 

We looked into this last month, when the correlation between gold and Bitcoin fell to the lowest value since the FTX collapse in November, an event which sparked mayhem in the crypto markets while the rest of the financial world traded quite placidly, including gold. 

Since then, the correlation has continued to fall. Indeed, looking at the more volatile 30-day Pearson correlation metric, the relationship is approaching a near-perfect negative one over the past thirty days. The last time it dipped this close to -1 was over two years ago (it nearly hit this level post-FTX also). 

While the prior metric is a little noisy and bounces around a lot due to the rolling 30-day window sample size, the next chart displays the same indicator but over a 60-day rolling window. Outside of the FTX collapse in November, the 60-day correlation is the lowest it has been in eighteen months, when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022 and sparked extreme volatility in the financial markets.

What does this tell us? Not much, really, beyond what we already know: Bitcoin trades like a risk-on asset. That much has been clear over the past two years or so, as one of the fastest rate hiking cycles in recent history has pulled the rug out from risk assets. The Nasdaq shed a third of its value last year in what was the worst year for stocks since 2008. Bitcoin was far from immune, falling down to a low of $15,500 in the aftermath of the FTX collapse. 

While the question over whether Bitcoin can decouple from risk assets in the long term remains one of the most intriguing, the numbers make it blindingly obvious that this has not happened to date. The pullback during last year’s bear market also emphatically strikes down any assumption that Bitcoin’s days of violent drawdowns were behind it (we are most definitely not in a “supercycle”), with the fall of over 75% from peak to trough being the fourth-worst in the last decade. 

The recent dip in correlation follows a turbulent period in the crypto markets. The SEC sued both Binance and Coinbase, the two biggest exchanges on the planet, in the first week of June. Last week, Ripple secured a big win when a (partial) ruling on its two-year battle with the SEC seemed to imply it is not a security (although ambiguity does remain and there will likely be an appeals process). 

These developments are obviously specific to the crypto markets, and with crypto not yet having a tangible impact on traditional finance markets, the turbulence did not carry over. 

Additionally, the decoupling of gold and Bitcoin pours cold water on the theory that Bitcoin had already obtained its “hedge” status, which was spoken in some quarters as the asset rose amid the banking wobbles in March. In reality, while this price action was intriguing, it was likely more to do with the market pricing in a lower chance of future interest rate rises, as we discussed here

“In a lot of ways, Bitcoin’s correlation with gold can be viewed as a progress tracker on the path to achieving the holy grail: an uncorrelated store of value for investors”, says Max Coupland, director of CoinJournal. “With this correlation dipping to a two-year low, it is clear there is a long way to go yet. Bitcoin remains highly susceptible to the whims of the stock market and the macro economy, and that is worth bearing in mind for investors amid the recent rise in crypto valuations”. 

Remember, last year represented the first time in Bitcoin’s history that it observed a pullback in the stock market. Prior to that, it was humming along in the longest and most explosive bull markets in history, kicked off almost to the day when Bitcoin was launched (the stock market bottomed in March 2009, two months after the genesis block was mined). 

All in all, Bitcoin is still trading like a risk asset, and it has experienced the pain of that label in the past eighteen months as interest rates have spiked aggressively. While it is up over 80% thus far in 2023, it remains 56% off its peak from November 2021. 

Nonetheless, things are undoubtedly brighter today than they were nine months ago, when FTX collapsed and the world seemed destined for a gruesome recession. While that recession still may come (and indeed the prospect of lagged effects of tightened monetary policy loom large), economic indicators have been remarkably resilient while hopes of a soft landing have risen. 

Personally, I fear the market may be getting ahead of itself, but what do I know? The sheer scale of rising from a zero-rate environment to a climate where T-bills are paying north of 5% is ferocious, and won’t be shrugged off lightly. Indeed, looking at previous cycles throughout history, the stock market has tended to pull back further after hikes have ended. 

While past performance is never indicative of the future, it certainly should provide food for thought, as phrases such as “meme stock”, “altcoin” and “robinhood” creep back into the vernacular. 

But whatever happens, the charts are clear: Bitcoin is still a risk-on asset. That means if the blood does hit the streets, gold will strongly outperform its digital cousin. Maybe that will change one day, but for now, the numbers don’t lie. 

If you use our data, then we would appreciate a link back to https://coinjournal.net. Crediting our work with a link helps us to keep providing you with data analysis research.

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Bitcoin may be near its next leg up – analyst says

  • Canaccord Genuity analyst sees upside in Bitcoin to over $38,000.
  • Javed Mirza explained his bullish view in a research note today.
  • Bitcoin is already up about 80% versus the start of the year.

It’s a suitable time for long-term investors to build their positions in Bitcoin as the chart suggests it may be about to start a new cycle, says Javed Mirza – a Canaccord Genuity analyst.

Recent price trends signal further upside

Bitcoin remains around the $30,000 level even after peer Ripple announced a big win against the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission.

Still, Mirza remains bullish on price trends that he says support further upside. In his research note today, the analyst told investors:

Utilise pending near-term weakness to add exposure near important technical support at its 50-day moving averages.

The 50-day MA currently sits at about $28,700 for Bitcoin. Mirza has a similar view on Ethereum as well.

Bitcoin could beat the $38,000 level

Mirza sees potential for a 28% rally in Bitcoin to over $38,000 level as long as it’s holding the aforementioned key support.

In his note this morning, he also pointed to the four-year moving average that the world’s largest cryptocurrency has recently reclaimed.

This confirms the long-term trend is now up, a strong technical positive, and is consistent with a four-year cycle taking hold in cryptocurrencies.

Note that the total supply of BTC is scheduled to halve in April or May of 2024 that typically tends to be a tailwind for its price. On top of that, BlackRock and several other asset managers have recently filed for a Spot Bitcoin ETF that signals institutional interest in cryptocurrencies.

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Actor Ben McKenzie says crypto is like a ‘Ponzi scheme’

  • McKenzie says cryptocurrencies resemble an MLM scheme.
  • He calls for the need to better regulate and license this market.
  • Bitcoin is currently up a whopping 80% versus the start of 2023.

An 80% year-to-date rally in Bitcoin is not enough to substantiate the legitimacy of cryptocurrencies for actor Ben McKenzie.

McKenzie dubs crypto an MLM scheme

McKenzie does not see cryptocurrencies as financial assets per se.

He views them more as a “story” that can be pushed out of existence if people stopped believing in them. On CNBC’s “Squawk Box”, the actor who played James Gordon in “Gotham” said:

Crypto resembles a Ponzi scheme or multi-level marketing scheme. In MLMs, 99% of people lose and 1.0% benefit. In crypto, it’d be exchange owners, VC firms, people that issue the coins.

Still, the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission has recently received several applications including from BlackRock Inc for a Spot Bitcoin ETF that signal institutional interest in BTC.

McKenzie says regulation will help

Last month, the regulator sued both Binance and Coinbase Global Inc for violating U.S. securities laws.

According to Ben McKenzie, greater regulation and more sophisticated licensing could indeed help turn crypto into a proper financial market.

You’re talking about an unregulated, unlicensed market run through shell corps in Caribbean. Crypto has benefitted from gray area between how we classify securities and commodities.

The veteran actor is even more bearish on cryptocurrencies other than Bitcoin as the latter is at least limited in terms of supply. Also on Tuesday, Professor Carol Alexander of Sussex University said BTC could hit $50,000 by the end of 2023.

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