Crypto Based Derivatives Trading Soars In CME – A Sign Of Sentiment Revival?
09 Março 2023 - 05:03AM
NEWSBTC
The year 2022 has been an extremely hard period for investors and
traders who wanted to join the crypto bandwagon. Last year saw high
profile crypto companies collapsing completely, sending waves
across the market and wiping off billions of dollars worth of
investments. This bearishness, however, has been flipped to
bullishness as the crypto market recorded recent highs, breaking
through crucial resistances and giving profits to investors.
Related Reading: Shiba Inu Is The Crypto Of Choice By Top 100
Ethereum Whales – Here’s Why But the recent market downturn
remained a cause for concern for investors. At the time of writing,
CoinMarketCap notes that the market shrunk by nearly a percent
today as Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) slipped because of recent
negative macroeconomic events. However, despite the downturn, trade
volume in the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) for crypto-based
futures is skyrocketing. This can be an indicator that smart money
might be flowing into the crypto market very soon. Crypto Based
Futures Attract Smart Money A recent report by CoinShare showed a
glimpse of the rough tides ahead with large capital outflows from
the crypto market, adding on to the overall bearishness surrounding
it. However, derivatives – a financial product that derives its
value from an underlying asset like crypto – have been performing
rather well in the CME, the world’s biggest market for derivative
products. Based on data by The Block, it shows that metrics
concerning investors and futures contracts have soared since the
start of the year. Large Open Interest holders of Bitcoin-based
futures contracts have gone up to a new all-time-high of 115, a
leg-up from 2020’s peak of 110 (see chart below). One of the most
notable metric, however, is the categories of traders that hold
these large open interest futures. Long positions held on
Bitcoin-based futures are mostly held by asset managers and hedge
funds. Hedge funds are a surprise to appear in this list
considering that nearly a week ago, capital outflows by major
institutions plagued the market with negative sentiment. This can
be a further sign that smart money is still interested in
crypto. This led to short positions to be dropped by the two
trader categories with a substantial depression in short positions
as the year started. However, asset managers are still considerably
more bullish than hedge funds in terms of net positions on BTC
futures. BTCUSD currently trading at $21,710 on the daily chart |
Chart: TradingView.com Related Reading: Stacks (STX) Crumbles 36%
After Weeks Of Rally Regulatory Clampdown Possibly The Driving
Factor US regulatory crackdown on major centralized exchanges may
have proven to be the driving factor for this increase in futures
market trade volumes. Recent reports about the US Securities and
Exchange Commission’s clampdown shows that the agency is bent on
regulating the space. With 2022 being a fresh memory on both retail
and institutional investors, the futures market might be a way to
find regulation in an unregulated space like crypto. -Featured
image from Carnegie Mellon University
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