A Bitcoin ETF Debuts, But Traders Aren't Biting

Discussion in 'Crypto Assets' started by ETJ, Aug 23, 2023.

  1. ETJ

    ETJ

    In this issue of the Bloomberg Crypto newsletter, Tanzeel Akhtar explains why a Bitcoin “first” failed to excite:

    Europe finally has a Bitcoin ETF. But did it really need one?
    By Tanzeel Akhtar
    August 22, 2023 at 4:00 PM CDT
    You're reading the Bloomberg Crypto newsletter.

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    In this issue of theBloomberg Cryptonewsletter,Tanzeel Akhtarexplains why a Bitcoin “first” failed to excite:

    A big shrug
    The topic that transfixed the crypto world this summer wasn’t some new invention, scandal or meme-coin rally (or wipeout). Rather, all eyes were on the SEC — and more precisely, whether the US securities regulator-turned-crypto bogeymanwould finally approvean exchange-traded fund tied to the spot price of Bitcoin. After all, one of the applicants was none other than themighty BlackRock.

    The SEC appears to still be deliberating, but in the meantime someone else took advantage of the sudden hype around Bitcoin ETFs. London-basedJacobi Asset Management, led by BlackRock alumnus Martin Bednall, this month listed what it calls “Europe’s first spot Bitcoin ETF” on Euronext Amsterdam, a putative milestone that received decent media coverage.


    Did Bednall just upstage his former employer? Well, maybe not. The regulator overseeing Jacobi’s product, Guernsey Financial Services Commission, doesn’t have quite the same heft as the SEC: It’s the securities watchdog of the English Channel island of Guernsey, which has a population of roughly64,000and isn’t part of the European Union.

    Media coverage aside, some who watch the ETF industry for a livingreacted with a shrug. What, they asked, is the point of having the “first” Bitcoin ETF in Europe, if it was approved by a minor regulator outside the EU and there’s already more than a dozen similar existing products that get the job done — even if they’re not strictly called ETFs? (Most of them are called ETPs, short for exchange-traded products).

    Source:mad:JSeyff
    But a more important question might be, how did investors react? Judging by the early results, the best answer seems to be that they didn’t, really. In the six trading sessions since the ETF (ticker BCOIN) listed, a total of just 4,409 units changed hands, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. TheETC Group Physical Bitcoinfund, traded in Germany (ticker BTCE), did more than 1.1 million in unit volume on Aug. 18 alone.

    In an interview, Bednall downplayed the thin trading, saying the ETF isn’t targeted at retail traders and so lower volume is to be expected, at least initially. He expressed optimism that institutions will embrace BCOIN. As for choosing Guernsey as the regulatory domicile, Bednall described its regulator as “more proactive in terms of changing the rules.”


    Even so, Jacobi’s ETF may be at a disadvantage to competing offerings in Europe because it’s not compliant with UCITS, a set of voluntary rules that many exchange-traded products follow. “As non-UCITS ETFs take relatively more effort than UCITS ETFs to be sold to end investors, the Jacobi Bitcoin ETF will thus have less distribution advantage even if it’s called an ETF,” says Bloomberg Intelligence analystHenry Jim.


    A positive SEC decision on US Bitcoin ETFscould unleashhuge buying of the underlying asset (Bitcoin), and it’s seen by crypto watchers as a key signal of the regulator’s attitude towards crypto. It’s hard to say the same for Jacobi’s debut.

    Charting it out
    BNB Price Caves

    The digital token created by Binance has slumped in value as the biggest crypto exchange faces pressure from regulators worldwide

    Source: CoinGecko



    Hearing them out
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    Ivan Soto-Wright
    CEO, Moonpay
    The payments startup burst into the mainstream with a series of high-profile brand partnerships before slashing its internal valuation amid a slump in NFTs. Now it'sformed a tie-upwith embattled crypto exchange Binance.US
    What we’re reading (and writing)
     
  2. traderjo

    traderjo

    Guernsey Financial Services Commission, doesn’t have quite the same heft as the SEC: It’s the securities watchdog of the English Channel island of Guernsey, which has a population of roughly64,000and isn’t part of the European Union. Says it all LOL
     
  3. ph1l

    ph1l

  4. maxinger

    maxinger

    After 6 years, CME BTC futures daily volume can hardly exceed 10k.
    <20k is considered pathetic.

    Don't expect other crypto derivatives to be doing well.
     
    Pekelo likes this.
  5. johnarb

    johnarb

    Everyone trading crypto perpetual futures
     
  6. maxinger

    maxinger

    Perpetual Futures = CFDs

    The last time I traded CFDs was more than a decade ago.
    CFD volumes are extremely (unbelievable!) high.
     
  7. johnarb

    johnarb

    No, perpetual futures are futures with no expiration/settlement date. Very efficient and highly liquid markets. Try it
     
  8. To be honest, I've been thinking tonight I may start to go Long the CME Micro-Ether Futures again tomorrow. It's been so long, that I barely remember how to trade these derivatives, lol.

    Maybe I should keep doing one or two each year just to prove I can sit in the saddle (no pun intended).
     
  9. maxinger

    maxinger


    If you trade the near-month contract, you have to keep on rolling.

    If you trade the far-month contract, you might
    be the only one trading it.
     
  10. traderjo

    traderjo

    CFDS may act like future as both have internal leverage but CFD ARE ISSUED by a Market maker entity / Non exchange traded OTC product where the issuer has a conflict of interest with trader
    Where as Futures are purely exchange trade,, where everybody is a market maker and the exchanges has NO conflict of interest with you
     
    #10     Aug 24, 2023
    maxinger likes this.