Insights, news and analysis for the professional investor January 30, 2022 Sponsored by Prices as of 1/30/22 @ 14:15 p.m. UTC If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here.
Welcome to Crypto Long & Short. The month is finally over and if you think the alts sold off more than expected, you would be correct. However, some have optimism with certain parts of the market.
– Lawrence Lewitinn, managing editor for global capital markets
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The Briefing It may be winter but the crypto bears aren’t hibernating. Nonetheless, is it possible to find opportunities even in this market?
One way to do so is to seek out cryptocurrencies that can outperform the first and biggest of them all, bitcoin (BTC). Except that’s easier said than done. Trying to find a well-capitalized cryptocurrency that doesn’t see its price closely tied to bitcoin is hard to come by. Yet, it may all depend on what time frame is being used.
This column has touched on correlations and volatilities over the past few months and there's a reason why that’s important. For portfolio managers looking to hedge their alternative coin (altcoin) holdings, knowing their assets’ relationships with the more liquid of the lot gives a sense of how big of an offsetting position they will need to take. And it should also offer at least one data point on how to spot opportunities to diversify portfolios.
Well, that’s the hope anyway. The past month, however, has been rough all around and some altcoins aren’t just getting hurt, they’re getting clobbered relative to what their expected returns were relative to bitcoin.
To come up with what those returns were expected to be, we first had to determine the beta of each cryptocurrency. This is a measure of how an asset moves (on average) when the overall market rises or falls. For those who may have forgotten their business school “Intro to Finance” course, one method to calculate the beta of an asset is to multiply its correlation to the market with the quotient of its volatility divided by the market’s volatility. In this case, the “market” is bitcoin.
After arriving at beta, we can try to come up with what we expect the markets to do over a given time frame.
So, here’s where we need to put in a disclaimer: The methods you’re about to see here are not necessarily approved by academia, Wall Street or by any asset manager with a modicum of self-respect. This is pure back-of-the-envelope spreadsheet stuff meant to illustrate a point, not to be hardcoded in your models. Please trade responsibly and seek professional assistance before taking another step.
Tl;dr Not financial advice!
With that out the way, here’s what we did. We took 20 very liquid, highly capitalized assets and multiplied their beta times bitcoin’s return from Jan. 1 to Jan. 26 to get what we’re calling “expected returns.” Proper application of the classic Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) would say one should multiply beta by the excess returns (or in this instance, loss) of the market, which in this case is bitcoin minus the risk-free rate and then adding the product to the risk-free rate itself.
Did you read the disclaimer above? Good, because the risk-free rate in this situation – for example, 90-day Treasurys – is so small that it is just about zero. It’s a rounding error at best when looking at only three and a half weeks of data.
What we find is that most of these cryptocurrencies — save algorand and dogecoin — woefully underperformed bitcoin and what they were expected to do during such a downturn. Holding on to altcoins over the past month wasn’t just painful, it was excruciating.
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Takeaways The chief financial officer of popular decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Wonderland was revealed to be a convicted scammer and former executive of Quadriga. TAKEAWAY: Michael Patryn, who went by Sifu, had considerable power over a treasury of nearly $1 billion, leaving many questioning the DeFi industry as a whole. Daniele Sestagalli’s token ecosystem (SPELL, ICE, TIME) took a massive hit as the founder knowingly kept Patryn on the Wonderland team before the revelation.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rejected Fidelity’s bitcoin ETF proposal. TAKEAWAY: For the sixth time since November, the SEC has rejected an application for an exchange-traded fund that would hold spot bitcoin. The approval of several futures-backed ETF and the woes of bitcoin trusts left many hopeful for a change of heart from the SEC. However, a handful of institutions look to continue applying for spot bitcoin ETFs that would better track the underlying asset.
MicroStrategy CFO Phong Le said the company would continue to buy bitcoin throughout 2022. TAKEAWAY: Earlier in the week, Michael Saylor announced on a podcast (UpOnly) that buying bitcoin is now a core part of the company’s strategy and an attempt to hedge against unscalable revenue. While the volatile asset has fallen 50% from its highs, Saylor believes the investment gives the company a fighting chance to retain purchasing power.
Custody firm Fireblocks raised $550 million at an $8 billion valuation for its fourth raise in under 18 months. TAKEAWAY: Fireblocks’ growth highlights the institutional move into the crypto space, with the number of the company’s clients increasing from 150 to 800 during 2021. Fireblocks provides crypto services to a wide range of clients, including hedge funds, banks, gaming companies and payment providers.
Decentralized stablecoins have given investors a scare as large players move into USDC and USDT. TAKEAWAY: Abracadabra’s MIM stablecoin and Terra’s UST both faced adversity after volatile market conditions combined with uncertainty over Abracadabra’s founder. A popular product created by Abracadabra allows users to leverage UST yields using MIM, gaining nearly $665 million in capital and correlating downside between the two assets. Curve, the largest stablecoin exchange by total value locked, saw investors flocking out of MIM, swapping nearly a billion dollars in the decentralized stablecoin for USDC, USDT and DAI.
– Teddy Oosterbaan, research analyst
Chart of the Week
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Building Your Brand, Then Building a Brand: Using the Power of Influence to Start a Business Two influencers identified and filled gaps in the market the big brands had overlooked.
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