First Mover: Bitcoins Hit Exchanges as Bloomberg Touts Crypto and DeFi Hedge Fund Seeks $50M

The upcoming U.S. presidential election has become one of the most contentious in history, fraught with searing divisions over everything from the economy to race to the continued health of democracy itself.

So it’s not surprising that Wall Street options traders are now pricing in expectations of elevated market volatility around the November election. Analysts for the investment banking giant Goldman Sachs noted earlier this month that price swings of nearly 3% are implied around election day in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of U.S. stocks.

What’s surprising is that options trading on notoriously volatile bitcoin prices, which often trade in sync with stocks, implies a stretch of uncanny calm come November, CoinDesk’s Omkar Godbole reported Tuesday.

Related: Bitcoin in Africa: FastBitcoins Partners With Flexepin to Expand Global Footprint

Godbole writes that ample technical factors might explain the discrepancy, from the influence of certain hedging strategies to the reality that the nascent bitcoin-options market is still quite small in relative terms, with most action concentrated in “front-month” contracts that expire in September.

Another possibility, according to Godbole, is that bitcoin, as a globally traded asset, might actually be less susceptible to the U.S. outcome, even though the cryptocurrency is priced in dollars. The implication could be that bitcoin decouples at that point from the U.S. market.

“The U.S. elections will have relatively less impact on bitcoin compared to the U.S. equities,” Richard Rosenblum, head of trading at the digital-asset firm GSR, told Godbole.

Crypto investment firm Panxora seeks $50M for new hedge fund to buy DeFi tokens

There’s been a months-long string of astonishing developments and ridiculous twists in the fast growing arena of decentralized finance, or DeFi. Digital tokens with names like YAM and SUSHI have appeared overnight, exploding in value, dominating crypto headlines and sparking serious conversations about the far-reaching potential of digital-asset markets and financial technologies.

Related: Ocean Protocol and Balancer Want to Do for Data What Uniswap Did for Coins

With total collateral locked into automated, blockchain-based DeFi trading and lending platforms surging more than 20-fold this year to $13 billion as of last week, big centralized cryptocurrency exchanges like Binance, Coinbase and OKEx have rushed to list the tokens and roll out DeFi offerings to avoid missing out.

Now, one cryptocurrency money manager, Panxora, seeks to raise up to $50 million for a new hedge fund to buy digital tokens associated with the fast-growing decentralized finance (DeFi) sector.

“This has got the potential to really change the way finance is carried out,” Panxora CEO Gavin Smith said in an interview.

In an ironic twist, Panxora’s announcement comes just as the DeFi market appears to be cooling. Just in the past week, total collateral in the systems has declined to about $9.5 billion, according to data tracker DeFi Pulse. Aave, a decentralized lender, saw its LEND tokens fall by 12% during the seven days through Tuesday, according to Messari, a cryptocurrency data firm.

Smith suggests that a correction was bound to come at some point. “We expect the market to be volatile in the early years,” Smith said. “While there is great potential there will inevitably be setbacks along the way.”

Read More: Crypto Hedge Fund Looks for $50M to Buy DeFi Tokens Amid Market Pullback

Bitcoin Watch

Key bitcoin (BTC) on-chain metrics have flipped bearish this week, suggesting the top cryptocurrency by market value may remain under pressure in the short-term.

On Tuesday, the net inflow of bitcoin to exchanges (measured by the total change in exchange balances) was 36,800 BTC – the biggest single-day rise since the markets crash on March 13, according to data source Chainalysis.

“Since Sept. 20, the net daily inflow of bitcoins to exchanges have been increasing and trade intensity has been declining,” Philip Gradwell, an economist at Chainalysis, told CoinDesk.

The data point “indicates a weakening market,” he said.

– Omkar Godbole

Read More: Bitcoin Market Weakening After Macro-Based Sell-Off, On-Chain Data Suggests

Token Watch

Ether (ETH): Ether in parked in smart contracts rises to four-year high.

Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC), Ren’s rBTC (RBTC): Supply of tokenized bitcoin on Ethereum passes $1.1B.

TBTC (TBTC): Thesis-built protocol relaunches after bitcoin-on-Ethereum project suffered smart-contract bug in May.

Aavegotchi (GHST): Aave-themed game revolving around value-staked NFTs serves as meta trip through DeFi ecosystem, Delphi Digital says.

What’s Hot

Bloomberg says “DeFi mania” pushes crypto to top-performing asset class of 2020, beating stocks, bonds, gold (Bloomberg)

Currency cold-war prognosticators mapping out scenarios from “Rainbow” to “Red,” dominated by the U.S., China or bitcoin (CoinDesk)

Bermuda Stock Exchange announces listing of exchange-traded fund to track digital-asset market (CoinDesk)

Peer-to-peer commerce company Origin’s new OUSD stablecoin uses yield farming to automatically grow holders’ balances (CoinDesk)

Trump’s former White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney joins blockchain advisory group Chamber of Digital Commerce; Goldman Sachs and Visa join as executive committee members (CoinDesk)

Analogs

The latest on the economy and traditional finance

Bank of England governor won’t say no to negative interest rates; it’s “in the tool bag” (FT)

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell says U.S. central bank will continue providing aid “for as long as it takes” (CNBC)

Trump Fed nominee Shelton draws scrutiny for reversal of earlier stance that U.S. should raise interest rates and return to the gold standard (NYT)

Iconic clothing retailer Ralph Lauren to cut 15% of workforce after steep revenue drop (WSJ)

Blackstone closes $8B fund for real-estate lending just as remote-working trend casts clouds over commercial office market (WSJ)

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