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This Article is From Jan 26, 2024

Largest Bitcoin ETF’s Slowing Outflows Lift Some Recent Crypto Gloom

Largest Bitcoin ETF’s Slowing Outflows Lift Some Recent Crypto Gloom
Bitcoin mines for heating pools at Bathhouse spa in the Williamsburg neighborhood in the Brooklyn borough of New York, US, on Monday, Nov. 27, 2023. From a local pizzeria that recently began accepting Dogecoin to mounting commissions for additions to a sprawling mural of images based on nonfungible tokens, this year’s rebound in the cryptocurrency market is creating buzz in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. Photographer: Gabby Jones/Bloomberg
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Bitcoin rose past $41,000 amid a slowdown in outflows from the $20 billion Grayscale Bitcoin Trust that strategists said may help to stanch a two-week slump in the token.

About $4.8 billion has exited the more than decade-old Bitcoin portfolio — the world's largest — since it became an exchange-traded fund on Jan. 11, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Bitcoin had shed around 20% in the same period.

The fund's conversion from a closed-end format allowed investors to close out a popular arbitrage trade and sparked disposals by the estate of the bankrupt FTX exchange. The daily pace of outflows from the vehicle, also known as GBTC, hit a peak of $641 million on Jan. 22 but cooled to $394 million by Jan. 25.

“We're starting to see a pattern of decreasing redemptions from GBTC,” Sean Farrell, head crypto strategist at Fundstrat Global Advisors, wrote in a note. “We'll certainly need to see a few more days of follow-through, but a mere slowing down of this AUM exodus would serve as a large boost for the market.”

The Grayscale fund began trading in its new format on the same day that nine other spot Bitcoin ETFs, including from BlackRock Inc. and Fidelity Investments, debuted in the US. Those funds have attracted more than $5 billion, while the net inflow into the 10 spot ETFs as a whole stands at about $745 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Read more: Why the Bitcoin ETF Was Such a Long Time Coming: QuickTake

Shares in the Grayscale vehicle fell to a discount to the portfolio's underlying Bitcoin holdings from early 2021 when the product was closed-end. ETF units tend to hug net asset value so the prospect of the trust's conversion led speculators to bet on the discount disappearing, which has duly happened.

“Profit-taking on previous GBTC investments, made at a discount to net asset value last year, has likely been a major driver behind Bitcoin's correction,” JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategists including Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou wrote in a note. Such profit-taking “should be largely behind us, limiting any downside for Bitcoin from here,” the team added.

‘Dominating' Volumes

The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust “has been dominating trading volume, and has already solidified its role as a true capital markets tool for risk transfer in Bitcoin,” John Hoffman, managing director of sales and distribution at Grayscale Investments, said earlier this week. He added that “GBTC's diverse shareholder base will continue to deploy strategies that impact inflows and outflows.”

Bitcoin surged almost 160% last year, outperforming traditional assets such as stocks, amid expectations that the US spot ETFs would catalyze wider adoption of the cryptocurrency by institutional and individual investors. 

The token has been retreating since the turn of the year and trailing global markets as investors wait to see if the hype becomes reality. The group of US spot Bitcoin ETFs had the most successful ETF launch in history, going by both trading and flow metrics, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.  

Bitcoin hit an intraday peak of $49,021 on Jan. 11 when the funds rolled out before sliding to a low of $38,510 earlier this week. The largest digital asset rose 3.1% to $41,158 as of 6:49 a.m. in New York on Friday. It set a record high of nearly $69,000 during the pandemic-era crypto mania in 2021.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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