In reaction, BTC prices rose to a new multi-year high, reaching $49,102. The market then fell 18% over the weekend, reaching fresh year-to-date lows of $40,236.
As with any important event, holders of Bitcoins enjoy debating whether it was priced in or not.
In this regard, Julio Moreno, the head of research at CryptoQuant, debunks the widely circulated narrative that the Bitcoin price drop was caused by Grayscale’s GBTC selling Bitcoin.
Before being converted to an ETF from a trust, Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) was one of the only options for stock traders in the United States to obtain exposure to Bitcoin price swings without having to purchase the actual cryptocurrency.
While GBTC has seen remarkable outflows after its uplisting into an ETF, a chunk of these have been from investors moving to lower-fee ETFs.
Moreno highlighted that, while GBTC sold approximately 60,000 Bitcoins, other Bitcoin ETFs net purchased roughly 72,000 Bitcoins, thus offsetting the sales of BTC from Grayscale’s GBTC.
He attributes the volatility in Bitcoin’s price to selling by Bitcoin holders (short-term traders and whales) who took profits following last year’s surge, noting that the ETF approval might just be the “sell-the-news” event.
However, several metrics in both the on-chain and derivatives domains suggest that a non-trivial portion of Bitcoin investors did treat the ETF approval as a sell-the-news event.
While there are other key driving factors behind the interim volatility, both futures and options markets have seen a meaningful uptick in open interest (OI) since mid-October, according to Glassnode.
Open interest in both markets remains around multi-year highs, showing that leverage is rising and becoming a more dominant force in markets.
At the time of writing, BTC was up 0.58% in the last 24 hours to $41,543, per CoinMarketCap data.
This article was originally published on U.Today
Source: Cryptocurrency - investing.com