Summary
In the May 2019 edition of our monthly volatility report, the SFOX research team has collected price, volume, and volatility data from eight major exchanges and liquidity providers to analyze the global performance of six leading cryptoassets?—?BTC, ETH, BCH, LTC, BSV, and ETC?.
The following is a report and analysis of their volatility, price correlations, and further development in the last month.
Current Crypto Market Outlook: Uncertain
Based on our calculations and analyses, the SFOX Multi-Factor Market Index, which was set at mildly bullish at the beginning of May 2019, has moved to uncertain at the beginning of June.
We determine the monthly value of this index by using proprietary, quantifiable indicators to analyze three market factors: price momentum, market sentiment, and continued advancement of the sector. It is calculated using a proprietary formula that combines quantified data on search traffic, blockchain transactions, and moving averages. The index ranges from highly bearish to highly bullish.
While the crypto market as a whole recovered substantially in May 2019, the overall sentiment appears to be at a tipping point: especially in the wake of the explosive late-2017 rally. It’s not clear in times of rapid growth how much of the growth is due to underlying fundamentals and how much is due to “fear of missing out,” or “FOMO.” This may be why the growth we’ve seen lately has been accompanied by renewed volatility and substantial swings in the prices of leading cryptoassets such as BTC.
Analysis of May 2019 Crypto Performance
In May of 2019, market movements suggested that investors may be eyeing BTC as a hedge against the S&P 500 and other markets that tumbled amid trade disputes. At the same time, unexpected events on particular cryptocurrency exchanges indicated that, while the crypto market has come a long way in terms of maturing infrastructure, it still has further to go.
BTC’s nearly perfect negative correlation with the S&P 500 suggests that some traders may be using it as a hedge amidst ongoing global trade disputes (May 13-May 31).
May marked one of the most tumultuous months for global markets in recent history as U.S.-China trade relations continued to strain. On Monday the 13th, as China announced that it would raise tariffs on roughly $60 billion of U.S. goods, the S&P 500 fell 1.7% and the Chinese yuan reached a four-month low. At the same time, BTC rose 7%, from $7158.34 to $7679.21. From that point onward in the month, BTC approached a nearly perfect negative correlation with the S&P 500, while its correlations with leading altcoins became almost perfectly positive.
These correlation data corroborate the view that some investors may be using BTC as hedge against global markets. BTC’s typically low correlation with other markets may make it appealing to some as such a hedge, and the fact that altcoins followed BTC during this time suggests that those investors using crypto as a serious hedge may still be defaulting to BTC, despite the continued maturation of the crypto sector beyond BTC. This highlights the potential for BTC to function as a unique hybrid of gold’s status as a store of value and the S&P 500’s status as a risk asset.
Broader market movements may have overshadowed ETF news (May 15th and May 20th).
Last month, the SFOX Volatility Report commented that anticipated SEC responses around the two Bitcoin ETF proposals? ? the Bitwise proposal and the VanEck proposal? ? ?could potentially impact the market, as ETF news had done in the past. This didn’t end up being the case. When the SEC postponed its decision on the Bitwise ETF proposal with five-week public comment period, the volume-weighted average price of BTC only moved 0.7%, from $8,010 to $8,069; when the SEC postponed the VanEck/SolidX ETF proposal and requested additional comments on the proposal, the volume-weighted average price of BTC only move 0.3%, from $7,910 to $7,936. This may suggest that, despite the substantial “hype” around Bitcoin ETF approval, the market doesn’t care about a Bitcoin ETF as much as it cares, for instance, about BTC’s utility as a hedge against global markets. Alternatively? ? ?or additionally? ? ?the probability of ETF approval may have already been “baked into” market prices.
Individual exchange gaffes underscored the need of the crypto sector to continue maturing (May 7th and May 17th).
On May 7th, Binance announced that hackers had stolen 7,000 BTC, or about $40 million, from them? ? ?though Binance was able to use its emergency insurance fund to prevent users’ funds from being affected, and BTC’s volume-weighted average price was minimally impacted. On the other hand, on May 17th, the price of BTC fell 10% from $8,002.08 to $7,191.58? ? ?a “flash crash” that was broadly attributed to a below-market sell order of 5,000 BTC for $6,200 on Bitstamp. That the Binance hack didn’t crash BTC’s price demonstrates that the crypto market’s infrastructure has matured since the days of major hacks such as Mt. Gox? ?but the Bitstamp order shows that the market still has a ways to go in terms of a single exchange’s outsized impact on the asset class.
What to Watch in June 2019
Look to these events as potentially moving the volatility indices of BTC, ETH, BCH, LTC, BSV, and ETC in June.
You can check out the full SFOX Crypto Market Volatility Report: May 2019 here.
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