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Bitcoin (BTC) was up 2.2% early Tuesday, starting off September on a strong note after an anemic performance last month. The dollar dropped to a two-year low against major trading partnersâ currencies.Â
The largest cryptocurrency climbed 2.6% in August, underperforming the 25% gain notched by the second-biggest cryptocurrency, ether (ETH).
For a comparison with traditional markets, the Standard & Poorâs 500 climbed 7% during the month, the best August since 1986. And gold, which garnered headlines when it pushed to a new record price above $2,000 an ounce, ended the month down 0.4%.Â
Bitcoin? Yawn. In August, the hottest returns for crypto traders came from the fast-expanding and often brain-exploding realm of decentralized finance, known as DeFi.Â
Among digital assets with a market capitalization of at least $1 billion, the just-released-last-month yearn.finance (YFI) token jumped eight-fold to claim the top spot. UMA (UMA), a trustless financial-contracts platform, rose five-fold, according to the data firm Messari.
Chainlink, an âoracleâ protocol that provides price feeds for DeFi platforms, saw its LINK tokens double during the month. Ether (ETH), the native token of the Ethereum blockchain, upon which most DeFi applications are built atop, surged 87% in August, leaving prices more than triple where they started the year.Â
Obscure Ethereum-oriented tokens are overtaking âcompetitors which dominated the leaderboard a few years ago,â the data firm Glassnode wrote Monday in a report. âThe innovation network around DeFi means that there is a constant source of new and lucrative financial games to play, while Bitcoin has seen little growth in terms of its value proposition or ecosystem.â
John Willock, CEO of digital-asset liquidity firm Tritum, told CoinDeskâs Daniel Cawrey on Monday that âthis looks like a perfect storm of high optimism for these protocols and recent innovations introduced that are proving they have long-term value.â The decentralized exchange Uniswap boasted a trading volume of $560 million on Sunday, exceeding that of the big cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, Cawrey reported.Â
âThere is no denying that DeFi is a thing,â said George Clayton, managing partner at Cryptanalysis Capital.
Some of the DeFi projects, with names like Yam and Spaghetti, might be dismissed as flukes or gimmicks if there werenât so many millions, hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars flowing in and out of them.Â
In July, when the YFI token went live, Yearn.Financeâs creator, Andre Cronje, described it as âcompletely valueless.â Â
In the words of CoinDeskâs Brady Dale in an article Monday: âDeFi has made a pivot to what might be called Weird DeFi: a set of difficult-to-parse projects whose larger value to the ecosystem is suspect at best and whose community is at least 20% driven by inside jokes.â
None other than BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes acknowledged in a monthly newsletter on Aug. 27 that he was âyield-farmingâ â using DeFi projects to earn token rewards â since the local nightclubs are currently closed.Â
âWhile I deride many of these projects as activity resulting in economic waste, there is an underlying proto-banking infrastructure that is being built on the rails of Ethereum and other protocols,â Hayes wrote. âCrypto capital markets are the best place to earn serious positive yields if you are willing to take some modicum of risk.â
Hayes added that he fully expects to âlose most of all the money I âinvestâ into any of these projects,â but that he views the âdestructionâ of his own capital as the âonly way to learn.â
When he figures it out, maybe he can explain to everyone else why YFI octupled in August.Â
Bitcoin is closing on a breakout above $12,000 amid etherâs price rally to fresh two-year highs.Â
The top cryptocurrencyâs options market shows increased demand for call options (bullish bets) at $12,000 strike. This signifies a more bullish move in the short-term, according to Matthew Dibb, co-founder of Stack, a provider of cryptocurrency trackers and index funds.
âFrom a macro level, the U.S. dollar has continued to fall since Jackson Hole, creating further buying pressure on bitcoin and broader safe haven commodities such as gold,â Dibb told CoinDesk in a WhatsApp chat.Â
Meanwhile, etherâs price rally looks to have legs as exchange deposits have declined to the lowest level since March, a sign of investors shifting to long-term holding strategies.Â
â Omkar Godbole
Ether (ETH): Price hits two-year high as exchange deposits decline, seen as a bullish sign.Â
Tezos (XTZ): Foundation and founders agree to pay $25 million to settle case over 2017 initial coin offering.Â
SushiSwap (SUSHI): Decentralized exchange aims to take liquidity from rival Uniswap by introducing a token that entitles holders to a share of trading fees. The token is also getting a listing on Binance, the worldâs biggest (centralized) cryptocurrency exchange.Â
Cardano (ADA): The Daedalus wallet upgrade sees staking and delegation improvements among other enhancements.
BitMEX Launches Mobile Trading App in 140 Countries (CoinDesk)
Researcher unlocks secret of âPatoshiâsâ $12.65B bitcoin hoard (CoinDesk)
Yearn, YAM and the Rise of Cryptoâs âWeird DeFiâ Moment (CoinDesk)
Interest on stablecoin deposits could help offset dollar inflation (CoinDesk)
Vitalik Buterin says DeFi yield farming is unsustainable (Decrypt)
Five CoinMarketCap Executives Depart Binance-Owned Firm (CoinDesk)
U.S. Internal Revenue Service says crypto transactions down to $1 are taxable (CoinDesk)
Global stocks dip but clinch fifth month of gains; dollar soft (Reuters)
Indiaâs GDP shrinks 23.9% in worst quarter on record (Nikkei Asian Review) ; residents of the country are hocking their gold (WSJ). Â