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Bitcoin's ETF hangover saddles token with its worst streak in a month

The batch of almost a dozen ETFs, including from investment titans BlackRock Inc. and Fidelity Investments, began trading on Jan. 11

Bitcoin

Supporters of Bitcoin’s contentious role as a store of value contend that the first US spot ETFs for the token herald increased investor access to the cryptocurrency | Photo: Bloomberg

Bloomberg

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By Suvashree Ghosh
 
Bitcoin posted its worst streak in about a month as the fanfare over new US exchange-traded funds for the largest digital asset subsided.
 
The token swung between gains and losses to trade little changed at $42,655 as of 1:42 p.m. Monday in Singapore. It dropped for three straight days through Sunday, the longest such losing run since mid-December. Smaller crypto coins were mixed, with second-ranked Ether dipping and BNB advancing. 

The batch of almost a dozen ETFs, including from investment titans BlackRock Inc. and Fidelity Investments, began trading on Jan. 11. Bitcoin briefly hit a two-hear high above $49,000 after they went live but then began retreating.

Chart
 
The spike and quick turn lower have the hallmarks of a “buy-the-rumor, sell-the-fact reaction” some market watchers had expected, Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG Australia Pty, wrote in a note. He sees a possible slide to $38,000 to $40,000 based on the signals from chart patterns for Bitcoin.

Supporters of Bitcoin’s contentious role as a store of value contend that the first US spot ETFs for the token herald increased investor access to the cryptocurrency. Skeptics point to 2022’s deep crypto crash and ensuing bankruptcies as reasons for caution about wider adoption despite a partial market rebound last year.

In a post on social-media site X, Bloomberg Intelligence’s senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said the new US spot funds achieved a net inflow of $819 million over the first two days of trading. That included $500 million for BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust and $422 million for the Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund.

The $26 billion Grayscale Bitcoin Trust — the largest such fund — saw $579 million of outflows after converting into an ETF last week, Balchunas said. The fund previously had a closed-ended structure and traded at a discount to its underlying holdings last year, spurring some to bet on the gap narrowing.

Speculators taking profits on that trade now that the discount has all but gone may be part of the reason for Bitcoin’s recent weakness, wrote Noelle Acheson, author of the Crypto Is Macro Now newsletter.

“It’s very unlikely that all the outflows from the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust went back into Bitcoin,” she said. “The new funds are likely to continue to see strong inflows over the next week, as money on the sidelines is funneled in, and as the marketing machines get going. This could be offset short-term from more outflows as speculative positions are unwound.”

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First Published: Jan 15 2024 | 12:16 PM IST

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