Cryptoverse: Bitcoin passes the bank stress test
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[March 21, 2023]
By Lisa Pauline Mattackal and Medha Singh
(Reuters) - As crisis stalks the traditional world of stocks and bonds,
bitcoin is suddenly looking like a safe haven.
The infamously volatile cryptocurrency seems positively hale and hearty,
just as a banking meltdown drives markets into the arms of a recession.
Bitcoin has risen 21% this month, while a choppy S&P 500 has lost 1.4%
and gold has gained 8%.
"If you were going to describe an environment where there were
successive bank runs because central banks are trying to fight inflation
with fast rate increases, that is pretty close to as spot-on a thesis
for owning bitcoin as you've ever heard," said Stéphane Ouellette, CEO
at digital asset investment platform FRNT Financial.
The cryptocurrency has, for now, severed its ties with stocks and bonds
and tagged on to a rally in gold, fulfilling at least one part of
creator Satoshi Nakamoto's dream - that bitcoin can serve as a refuge
for suffering investors.
Bitcoin's 30-day correlation with the S&P 500 has slid to negative 0.12
over the past week, where a measure of 1 indicates the two assets are
moving in lock step.
A selloff in banks has wiped out hundreds of billions of dollars in
market value and forced U.S. regulators to launch emergency measures.
The past couple of weeks has seen Silicon Valley Bank and crypto lender
Silvergate go under, while Credit Suisse has teetered on the brink.
'RETURN TO CORE ETHOS'
Let's not carried away, though. This is bitcoin.
"The bearish argument would be that these dynamics are temporary, and
ultimately this rally is not going to sustain," said Ouellette.
It remains to be seen if bitcoin's bullishness will endure as attention
shifts to the Federal Reserve's policy meeting this week where the U.S.
central bank must walk a fine line as it fights inflation and bank
stresses.
Furthermore, the cryptocurrency's allure hasn't all been about safety.
The rapid price rise has forced some short-sellers to cut their bets and
buy coin back. Data from Coinglass shows traders liquidated $300 million
worth of crypto positions on Monday, with most of that total - $178.5
million - short positions.
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A representation of bitcoin is seen in
an illustration picture taken on June 23, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit
Tessier
Nonetheless, bitcoin is resurgent.
It now commands nearly 43% of the total crypto market, its highest
share since last June, according to CoinMarketCap data, while the
total cryptocurrency market's capitalization has jumped 23% to $1.1
billion since March 10.
"We're seeing a return to bitcoin's core ethos, that of a financial
asset independent from the opacity and meddling of the centralized
financial system," said Henry Elder, head of decentralized finance (DeFi)
at digital asset investment manager Wave Digital Assets.
The mainstream bank crisis has also fueled some interest in DeFi,
with the total value of tokens linked to such platforms rising to
$49 billion from $43 billion over the past week, according to
DappRadar.
BITCOIN IN A BANK CRISIS
Not all areas of the digital world have been immune to the banking
fallout, though. The no. 2 stablecoin Circle USD or USDC lost its
1:1 peg to the dollar after disclosing its reserves were parked at
the shuttered Silicon Valley Bank.
As worries spread over USDC's ability to maintain its peg, its
market cap slid to $36.8 billion last Friday from $43.8 billion a
week earlier, even as leading stablecoin Tether gained around $4
billion.
Market participants said some USDC withdrawals were likely
reinvested in bitcoin as well, helping fuel the rally.
"It's too soon to say that bitcoin has proven the narrative that
it's an alternative in a banking crisis," cautioned Ed Hindi, Chief
Investment Officer at Tyr Capital in Geneva.
But he added: "The rally we are currently witnessing in bitcoin will
be looked back at as the point in time where its main property as a
decentralized non-sovereign asset was stress tested."
(Reporting by Medha Singh and Lisa Mattackal in Bengaluru; Editing
by Vidya Ranganathan and Pravin Char)
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