What to Expect From Bitcoin in 2024
Expectations that U.S. regulators will approve spot bitcoin ETFs next year are driving prices higher. History suggests we might see a slowdown as we approach the halving in April 2024, says Path Crypto's David Liang.
Optimism regarding a spot bitcoin ETF application approval ignited an almost 49% gain in BTC's price since October. It is likely that the Securities and Exchange Commission approves or denies multiple applications simultaneously for logistical and consistency reasons. (Figures cited are as of Dec. 18 unless noted otherwise.)
Spot BTC trading is concentrated on several exchanges: Coinbase, Binance, Bybit and OKX. They account for about 65% of spot BTC trading. Binance accounts for 35.5%, while Bybit, OKX and Coinbase account for 11.3%, 9.2%, and 8.9%, respectively.
The average BTC order size has been decreasing since early 2021 and is about $1,652. While smaller order sizes are associated with retail customers, many, if not most, institutions divide trade orders into smaller orders to minimize slippage. It would be imprudent to suggest retail customers were primarily responsible for recent trading patterns in BTC based on order size analysis alone.
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Coinbase's third-quarter 2023 trading summary suggests declining volume in three of the past four quarter-over-quarter measures. Volume among retail and institutional traders has fallen at a similar pace over the course of the past year, with retail and institutional customers trading about $4.2 billion and $24.7 billion in the third quarter, respectively.
Figure 1. Source: CoinBase, Path Digital Advisors
Bitcoin futures markets
CME Group's BTC futures open interest reached $4.55 billion, accounting for about 25% of total BTC open interest. Current open interest reached a level last seen in the second quarter of 2022.
Figure 2. Source: CME Group, Path Digital Advisors
The majority of CME BTC futures positions are held by asset managers and leveraged funds, with the former exhibiting a long bias and the latter showing a short bias. This appears intuitive as asset managers tend to approach investing with a longer time horizon relative to other buy-side customers. Conversely, hedge funds and commodity trading advisers, or CTAs, tend to trade with a shorter time horizon and engage in basis trading and hedging.
Institutional investors are becoming more active in the crypto space. CME Group notes that "average large Bitcoin open-interest holders, with at least 25 contracts, hit an all-time high the week of November 7, 2023."
The funding rate aligns the perpetual futures price to the spot price. When the funding rate is positive, long contract holders pay the funding fee to the short contract holders, and vice versa. The funding rate has trended higher with the spot price of BTC, suggesting bullish sentiment and bias.
Bitcoin outlook
The historical relationship between BTC prices and consumer interest has decoupled recently. If the antecedent that consumer interest is solely driven by retail customers is true, then it appears that either:
- Retail customers are trading without conducting research, or
- Institutional investors are having an outsized influence on prices.
The sentiment among institutional investors appears to be constructive. The parallel upward shifts of the futures curve in each month of the fourth quarter of 2023 suggest bullish activity and a long bias among institutional investors.
The ETF approval is sufficiently baked into bitcoin prices such that positive momentum from the announcement may be offset by traders taking profits off the table. This suggests a possible reversion to the mean in the days after the announcement. Thereafter, the market will likely recalibrate its focus to the halving in April.
Figure 3. Source: Bloomberg, Path Digital Advisors LLC
David Liang
David Liang is director of investment management at Path Digital Advisors. A passionate capital markets and investment management professional, he has over 13 years of public and private markets investment experience, working in roles such as trading, research, strategy and portfolio construction. He spent the majority of his career at traditional financial services firms such as Barclays Capital, UBS and Fannie Mae, among others. David holds a bachelor's degree in finance from George Washington University and a master's degree in Mathematical Finance from Columbia University. In his spare time, he enjoys distance running, ice hockey, and cooking.