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- š» Is something (or someone) suppressing Bitcoin's price?
š» Is something (or someone) suppressing Bitcoin's price?
Also... š Drake's $1M Bitcoin bet goes bust, š« Tether's golden ticket , and more!
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It might be suffocatingly hot outside, and the heat is spreading to crypto markets this week.
BTC has been bouncing around $63,259.05, gaining 2.09% in the last 24 hours, showing a weekly increase of 6.62%.
ETH experienced a slight gain to $3,465.30, adding to its 5.04% increase over the week.
Binance Coin (BNB) rose 4.74%, Solana (SOL) saw a more significant gain, rising by 16.24% increase over the past week.
Other heavy gainers include Dogecoin (up by 8.31%), Cardano (up by 9.98%), and AVAX (up by 23.24%).
Memeworld saw some fireworks, with BONK up 27.32%, and in the political memecoin realm, Jeo Boden (BODEN) and Doland Tremp (TREMP) had mixed performances, with BODEN rising 32.96% overnight, despite a monthly drop of 35.00%, and TREMP climbing 15.69%.
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Heck, just look at one of our early editions of This Week in Crypto, June 2018 (side note, weāre old)ā BTC was down 3.36%, but at a price of $5,906.38 per BTC.
My, how the times have changed!
Anyway, weāre back like we never leftā welcome to the new This Week in Crypto by CoinCentral.
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š„Trending Stories from Around the World
š¤£ Drake Faces $1M Bitcoin Loss from Sports Bets: Thought your meme coin portfolio was down bad? Drake is on the verge of losing $1 million worth of Bitcoin after betting $500,000 each on the Edmonton Oilers and the Dallas Mavericks to win their respective championships. The Mavs and the Oilers lost. Drake placed these bets on crypto casino Stake, where he has previous partnerships.
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oooooooooof sorry Drake
š¤ Robinhood to Acquire Bitstamp for $200 Million: This acquisition aims to expand Robinhood's global reach, leveraging Bitstamp's established presence in serving both retail and institutional customers.
š Terraform Labs' $4.5 Billion SEC Smackdown: Do Kwonās Terraform Labs is set to cough up nearly $4.5 billion to the SEC to settle a civil securities fraud case. This hefty fine still needs court approval; the SEC might only see a fraction of it. So, there's that.
š„ Tetherās Gold-Backed aUSDT Makes Waves: Tether is shaking up the crypto world with aUSDT, a gold-backed stablecoin pegged to the dollar. This new Alloy platform lets users mint aUSDT with tokenized gold. Itās like DeFi, but with a dash of KYC.
š Base Networkās DEX Surge: Base, Coinbase's Layer 2, just leapfrogged Binance Chain with a 53% surge in DEX users, hitting 267,000. Uniswap users are flocking to Base, driven by the memecoin madness, with tokens like BRETT and TOSHI leading the charge.
š Central Banks Eye CBDCs: A BIS survey shows 94% of central banks are exploring CBDCs. Most favor wholesale versions for banks over retail ones. CBDCs are gaining traction globally, with China, Nigeria, and the Bahamas leading the way.
āļø Deutsche Telekom Mines Bitcoin: Deutsche Telekom is diving into Bitcoin mining. Already running nodes for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and more, they announced this at the BTC Prague conference. Dirk Rƶder (just two letters away from a very unfortunate name), head of Web3 infrastructure, confirmed the move, highlighting Deutsche Telekom's growing involvement in blockchain technologies, including partnerships with Polkadot, Flow, Celo, and more.
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š¤ Why Bitcoin No Moon? Whoās Selling Bitcoin Amid ETF Inflows
ETFs and institutions are snapping up Bitcoin, but whoās on the other end driving the price down?
Itās more complicated than youād think.
The 2024 focus has been on ETF inflows as if they were the entire story, but it neglects the broader market dynamics picture. So, whoās offloading their Bitcoin?
On one hand, the early adopters, or OGs, are cashing in. These seasoned holders have more BTC than all the ETFs combinedāten times more.
This isnāt unusual; they tend to sell during bull markets, a pattern dating back to Bitcoin's inception.
Why?
Bills come up. Life-changing profit is worth realizing sooner rather than later for many.
Letās keep in mind BTC whales are less likely to be sage oracles thinking in terms of centuries rather than early techies that got super lucky with their timing, either mining or through bold purchases.
Beyond that, weāre witnessing a new era in Bitcoin trading.
The introduction of paper BTC (through CME and Cboe in December 2017) has transformed the market landscape, and its interplay with the 2024 ETF launch is worth exploring.
Futures markets allow you to buy Bitcoin on paper: you can get Bitcoin exposure from sellers with no actual BTC, only USD.
This diversion of demand from real to paper BTC is significant.
In the past, Bitcoin price rallies were slightly impacted by limited sales from OGs and newly minted coins from miners.
Today, paper BTC plays a pivotal role.
Despite spot holders holding firm, the bear market of 2022 was largely influenced by an influx of paper BTC (The first Bitcoin Futures ETF (ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF) was approved in October 2021)
Synthesizing this information is more of an art than a science, and everyone is working with educated estimates, but thereās enough information to justify that the bull marketās price rally may be suppressed by paper BTC, as weāll explore below.
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š Bitcoinās derivatives markets are forcing a market dynamics lesson on BTC holders; hereās the breakdown:
ā¶ļø Diversion of Demand: When investors buy into BTC ETFs, they are not necessarily buying physical Bitcoin.
Instead, they might be buying shares of a fund that holds Bitcoin or gains exposure through derivatives.
This can divert demand away from the actual Bitcoin market.
š§» Creation of Paper BTC: BTC ETFs often use futures contracts and other derivatives to gain exposure to Bitcoin prices.
These financial instruments do not require the holder to buy actual Bitcoin, thereby increasing the supply of āpaper BTC.ā
In simple terms, it aināt realā itās a fugazi, fairy dust.
This supply increase can meet new investors' demand without pushing up the price of actual Bitcoin.
ā¬ļø Price Suppression: With more investors able to gain Bitcoin exposure through ETFs and futures rather than buying physical Bitcoin, the demand pressure on the actual Bitcoin market is reduced.
This can suppress the price of Bitcoin, as the influx of new investment money is channeled into financial products rather than buying the real asset.
š Market Perception: If the market perceives that most new demand is being met through paper BTC rather than actual purchases, it can influence trader behavior.
Sellers might be more willing to sell at lower prices, anticipating that demand is being absorbed by derivatives rather than spot markets.
This price suppression through derivatives and futures isnāt exclusive to BTC; it has played out in several other asset classes.
Price Suppression Theory: Some market analysts believe that the extensive use of futures contracts has suppressed the price of physical assets like gold. The idea is that by creating large amounts of āpaper goldā (futures contracts), the actual demand for physical gold is reduced, keeping the prices lower than they might be if all investments were directed toward physical gold.
š„ The gold market is one of the most prominent examples of how derivatives can influence the price of an asset; gold futures contracts allow investors to speculate on the price of gold without actually holding physical gold.
š In the real estate market, mortgage-backed securities are a type of derivative that played a significant role in the 2008 financial crisis.
MBS are created by pooling together various mortgage loans and selling the cash flows from these pools to investors.
While MBS are not typically cited as directly suppressing real estate prices, their proliferation led to significant distortions in the housing market. The ease of selling mortgage loans to be packaged into MBS led to lax lending standards, increasing the supply of money available for housing and inflating property prices.
When the market for these securities collapsed, real estate prices sharply declined, demonstrating the powerful indirect effects of financial derivatives on the underlying asset market.
š¢ļø Similar to gold, the oil market is heavily influenced by futures trading. This allows companies and investors to hedge against or speculate on the future oil price, leading to significant price volatility.
At times, the price set in the futures market can suppress spot prices, especially when there is a significant amount of speculative trading that does not correlate directly with the physical supply and demand for oil.
š½ Agricultural commodities like wheat, corn, and soybeans are also traded heavily through futures contracts. These markets were originally created to help farmers hedge against price fluctuations, but theyāve become popular with speculators.
In January 2024, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved the first spot Bitcoin ETFs, marking a significant milestone for the cryptocurrency market.
Unlike futures-based ETFs, spot Bitcoin ETFs hold actual Bitcoin; ETFs allow investors to gain direct exposure to Bitcoinās price movements without needing to manage digital wallets or deal with self-custody issues.
While ETFs increase overall market participation, the presence of derivatives and synthetic products can lead to complex interactions between spot and futures markets, influencing price movements and volatility
This begs the questionā how do long-term self-custodied Bitcoin holders combat price suppression?
BTC price suppression isnāt necessarily a terrible thing; itās an indicator that Bitcoin is mature enough to handle the same market manipulative abuse as more mature asset classes.
Still, BTC is for BTC holders, and the technology is vastly more important than the speculative markets that have formed around it in recent history.
A community of long-term Bitcoin holders can take proactive steps to combat price suppression by promoting self-custody, supporting transparency, and advocating for Bitcoin-backed financial products.
Moreover, as more Bitcoin is moved into cold storage, the available supply in the active market decreases. HODL behavior shifts the balance in favor of long-term organic pricing, making it harder for paper Bitcoin to have as much suppressive effect.
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This Week in Crypto is brought to you by Uphold.
Why are we rocking with Uphold?
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š¤ āWhatās That Thing?ā
In this weekās āWhatās That Thing,ā weāre talking about Optimism.
No, this isnāt a ācheer upā pep talk. Optimism, a Layer 2 solution, uses āoptimistic rollupsā to take transactions off-chain and then batch-post them back to Ethereum, reducing fees and keeping things snappy.
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Born from the brains at Optimism Labs, the $OP token hit the crypto scene in 2022. The token is the backbone of the networkās governance and incentives, but the Optimism network still uses $ETH for gas.
Its price spikes in January 2023 and May 2024 were parallel to those of $ETH and the bull market. Its trading activity is done on major centralized exchanges predominantly based in Asia, like Binance and Bybit, but itās also available on Coinbase.
For the full scoop, check out our article on CoinCentral: Optimism (OP) Overview.
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š Whatās New at CoinCentral?
Being the disciples of everlasting self-improvement and self-mastery, weāve been working on our craft.
Youāll notice everything about the new version of This Week in Crypto seems better. Itās cleaner. Prettier. Harder hitting. And most importantly, weāre having fun with it again.
That being said, we launched This Week in Crypto in 2017 to establish a direct relationship with our readers, away from an oligarchy of algorithms run by Meta, Google, and Twitter.
By having a 1:1 channel, we believe we can champion the best aspects of cryptocurrency. Itās our core belief that top-notch educators will be what take crypto mainstream.
That being said, growth is our lifeblood, so if you think weāre cool and think someone could benefit from reading and subscribing, be a homie and forward this newsletter.
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Think of us as your private research labāif something tickles our fancy, we become obsessed with understanding how it works and teaching others how to do the same.
Thatās all for this week.
Stay breezy!
AM
DISCLAIMER: This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. The content herein is not an investment recommendation or a solicitation to buy or sell any financial instruments or assets. Readers are advised to conduct their own research and exercise caution in making any financial decisions.