Weekly Crypto Market Wrap, 15th November 2021

Zerocap
9 min readNov 15, 2021

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Week in Review

Winners & Losers

  • After a few weeks of mixed performance across the crypto markets, this week saw a resurgence of strength in BTC, overcoming the 63k mark with volume and quickly shooting up to a new high of $68,700 by Tuesday. Inflation data out of the US led to further upside on Wednesday, although the momentum could not be sustained. Following the establishment of a new all-time high at $69,000, the asset tumbled 7% in a matter of hours as late longs were punished with liquidations as stops were hit. The remainder of the week was spent recovering as open interest settled and funding rates reset. ETH followed suit, as did the rest of the market with a minority of assets outperforming on the back of fundamental drivers. Overall, BTC returned 3.49% and ETH returned 0.29% WoW.
  • U.S. stocks saw the first week of retracement since early October as inflation concerns weakened consumer sentiment to a decade low. Despite extended negotiations over climate change talks for COP26 in Glasgow, the final draft of conclusive talks failed to deliver a hard move away from fossil fuel reduction by 2030. Commodity and mining shares rallied on the result. Shares of Tesla Inc. initially dropped by 12% following CEO Musk offloading USD 7 billion worth of his shareholding. Evergrande, the world’s most indebted developer, managed to meet the deadline to service the coupon payments of its offshore debt obligations, which led to a rebound on Chinese shares both at home and listing abroad. Shares in JD.com, the second-largest online retailer in China, also rallied following its initiation to employ PBoC’s CBDC in the form of payment options.
  • Macroeconomic data concentrated on inflation and consumer sentiment from the US- PPI (8.6% p.a. And 6.8% ex Food & Energy, Same as forecast), CPI (6.2% p.a. Vs 5.9% forecast and 4.6% vs 4.3% forecast ex F&E). The higher inflation data, especially through the consumer end, weighed heavily on the Michigan consumer sentiment report, which fell to a ten year low. Given that the consumer sector contributes to 70% of the US annual GDP output, renewed concern on stagflation emerged, and the bond market took the brunt of the pain.
  • The bond market was the pain trade for the week; despite stocks retracing off ATH and ending in the red WoW, bond yields highlighted most of the inflationary concerns from investors. 10 yr UST began the week at 1.43% but closed up 13bp to 1.56%. 30 yr UST are now only 3bp away from the important 2% threshold resistance. The credit market recovered some ground following the confirmation of coupon payment by Evergrande’s offshore USD debt. Still, China will reveal October’s property prices, retail sales and industrial production in the coming week to plot the direction for the economy’s forward momentum.
  • The VIX index was subdued despite a weekly fall in the S&P 500. The US Veterans Day holiday on Thursday also shortened the trading week, limiting much of the actions.
  • Gold benefited as a function of hedging flows, despite a stronger DXY index following the higher inflation data reports. The market began the week below $1,800 but quickly penetrated the previous resistance level to close the week at $1,865, with the next resistance at the 14th June high of 1877.70. Oil prices weakened from last week’s seven-year high to close lower just above the $80 WTI support level. The continual unwinding of a supply-side squeeze on the positioning was visible in addition to stronger USD reference.

Macro, Technicals & Order Flow

Bitcoin

  • We got the break of all-time highs that we forecasted this week, touching 69,000. The inflation data out of the US was concerning — the highest inflation spike since 1990. We saw an initial run, before BTC and the rest of the market began to sell-off. Altcoins took a plunge as the day progressed, with investors selling the fear, and asking questions later. By Asia close, the market was clearly bid again — with equity futures catching a bid, and the risk environment beginning to turn.
  • “It’s almost like we are in this period of invincible optimism,” Liz Young, head of investment strategy at SoFi. It does amaze us that we are continuing to bid risk on the back of concerning inflation numbers, but as they say — the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent, so I certainly wouldn’t be shorting risk in any sizable way until we see some real signs of a turning point.
  • The fact that the market is bidding BTC at times when gold would normally rally on flights to safety and inflation hedge flows, is indicative of sentiment should we see a meaningful shift in risk trends.
  • Technically, price has rejected off support at 63,000, after taking out stops below this level, which coincides with the descending trendline from Oct 20.
  • Open interest out to Dec 31 is still dominated by 100,000 calls. With the next two interest levels at 120,000 and 200,000. Some fairly wild speculation here, but a great ‘tell’ on sentiment levels.

OI Interest by Strike — Dec 31, 2021

Bitcoin: Total Supply Held by Long-Term Holders

Bitcoin Net Position Change

UTXO Realised Price Distribution

BTC Futures Annualised Rolling 1 Mth Basis

Bitcoin Futures Open Interest

BTC Perpetual Liquidations 1W

BTC Perpetual Swaps Funding

Bitcoin Futures Estimated Leverage Ratio

  • One last piece of newsflow to note — The Van Eck spot ETF was declined in the US, citing further concerns around pricing manipulation. The fact that BTC held up against this news is encouraging — the question in our minds is whether ASIC in Australia will follow this logic.
  • In summary, it looks like a buoyant week ahead for BTC.

Ethereum

  • We mentioned that open interest had clearly been focused on the 5,000 psychological level. Our OTC desk was seeing profit-taking between 4,800 and 4,950 with some trades playing the break above 5,000. We got above 4,800, but struggled with momentum. The inflation data led to some fairly hefty repositioning, but price still respected the ascending trendline from early October, albeit with a few false breaks. We now sit at 4,700, playing the bounce higher.
  • From the macro view, we still see potential headwinds for ETH in growth rolls over in traditional markets. This said, there are some very interesting structural factors at play. Smart contract growth persists, as supply declines. From late in 2020, the ETH supply on exchanges declined from around 28% to 11% as of earlier this month. Smart contract growth has clearly gone the other direction.

ETH Smart Contract Growth vs Supply (Delphi Digital)

  • DeFi and multichain activity continue to accelerate, and we expect this trend to continue in the short to medium-term. Increased on-chain activity and high gas prices led to ETH having its first deflationary week since its inception earlier in November. All of which point to supply constraints.
  • Open interest to Dec 31 in the options markets is gunning for a squeeze, with the 5,000 and 10,000 levels clearly favoured.

ETH Open Interest by Strike: Dec 31, 2021

Ethereum Exchange Net Position Change

Supply Held by Wallets with Balances of 10–100 ETH

ETH Perpetual Swaps Funding

ETH Futures Annualised Rolling 1 Mth Basis

Ethereum Grayscale AUM

  • Ethereum staking contracts continue to limit floating supply — the amount of ETH in the ETH 2.0 staking contract currently sits at 8,230,678. This represents 6.95% of the total supply estimated to remain locked for ~ one year, continuing to slowly constrict supply.
  • All in all, the risk environment is holding steady — price has been bid across risk against the inflation data out of the US. Combining on-chain and structural factors, we are looking for a healthy week for ETH.

DeFi & Innovation

  • Morgan Stanley note; the metaverse is the next big investment theme.
  • JPMorgan note says DeFi growth slower than it seems, mostly fueled by a surge in ETH price.
  • Twitter launches “Twitter Crypto” task force to explore potential projects for the platform.
  • University of Cambridge to launch decentralized carbon-credit marketplace on the Tezos blockchain.
  • Elected New York Mayor Eric Adams wants crypto to be taught in schools.

What to Watch

  • President Joe Biden and Xi Jinping’s virtual meeting this Monday.
  • US retail sales report.
  • RBA’s Monetary Policy meeting minutes.
  • US Congress “demystifying crypto” committee hearing on Wednesday.
  • First network results following the Bitcoin Taproot upgrade.
  • VanEck’s bitcoin futures ETF results, starting Tuesday.

Disclaimer

This document has been prepared by Zerocap Pty Ltd, its directors, employees and agents for information purposes only and by no means constitutes a solicitation to investment or disinvestment. The views expressed in this update reflect the analysts’ personal opinions about the cryptocurrencies. These views may change without notice and are subject to market conditions. All data used in the update are between 8 Nov. 2021 0:00 UTC to 14 Nov. 2021 23:59 UTC from TradingView. Contents presented may be subject to errors. The updates are for personal use only and should not be republished or redistributed. Zerocap Pty Ltd reserves the right of final interpretation for the content herein above.

* Index used:

Originally published at https://zerocap.com on November 15, 2021.

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