Bitcoin, the asset class, received some heavyweight hedge fund validation last week when a regulatory filing revealed New York-based Renaissance Technologies is considering including cash-settled bitcoin futures among the instruments it trades.
Renaissance, arguably the worldâs most secretive and successful money manager, did not respond to requests for comment.
Still, itâs interesting to hear how trading experts think a firm like Renaissance might approach bitcoin as an underlying asset, given the hedge fundâs reputation for using mind-bending math to identify patterns and anomalies across a universe of assets.Â
Read more: $166B Asset Manager Renaissance Eyes Bitcoin Futures for Flagship Fund
Prize-winning mathematician James Simons began Renaissance Technologies (originally called Monemetrics) in a Long Island strip mall in 1978. Renaissance is now famous for pioneering data science and machine learning before these disciplines went mainstream, and has been described as having the best physics and mathematics department in the world.Â
Highlighting the complexity of the fundâs approach, Max Boonen, the founder of digital assets trading platform B2C2, referred to a famous quote attributed to former Renaissance chief Robert Mercer, who said the firm was unable to make sense of some of its most profitable trading signals.Â
âRenaissance can make predictions based on pure time-series data and they donât necessarily have to have a strong economic rationale for why a signal works or doesnât work,â said Boonen. âIn fact, such an approach might be quite appropriate for Bitcoin at the stage that it is. Because itâs sometimes very difficult to make sense of the moves in the Bitcoin market.âÂ
Richard Craib, the founder of Numerai, a hedge fund built by a crowdsourced network of data scientists, says he has come across young startups that are using artificial intelligence to get an edge looking at on-chain transactions, or mining alternative data around news flows in the crypto industry.Â
But he doubted Renaissance would be going to such lengths, opting for what he called ânormal alchemyâ instead.Â
âRenaissance and firms like it are very good at working with time-series data and already understand corn futures and oil futures and trade all those markets,â he said. âSo I donât think it means they have any thesis on bitcoin. I donât believe they are going to be âlong bitcoinâ or something, but itâs definitely worth taking on.â
Read more: This USV-Backed Startup Has a Solution for Buying Information With Confidence
While it might be alluring to think of a firm like Renaissance having some kind of dedicated bitcoin desk, itâs likely to be simply plugging in existing models, Craib added.
âI would guess they are seeing it more as, what can we do just with the price volume data, because a lot of their strategies donât require new alternative datasets,â he said.Â
Emmanuel Goh, CEO of derivatives data platform Skew, agreed that bitcoin is probably âjust another instrumentâ to Renaissance.
âThey have access to all the historical data and will be running all sorts of modeling on the instrument itself and see if there are some interesting patterns,â he said. âThe dataset is a little bit smaller than for other instruments,â he said.
The Renaissance filing is further evidence that the derivatives market is where a lot of people will go to express their views in terms of financial instruments, Goh added. âWe will be tracking how much activity there is on CME futures contract and if that picks up meaningfully to see if this means more and more people are entering,â he said.
Read more: Crypto Derivatives: A Corner of the Market or the Market Itself?
These days, bitcoin trades more than the currencies of many smaller countries. But Boonen of B2C2 said there might still be a question whether the bitcoin market will be big enough to be worth it for Renaissance.Â
âBitcoin remains a reasonably small market; itâs not the tiny market that it used to be, trading volumes are there and are strong. But I wonder whether the market today is big enough for it to be worth the risk for Renaissance,â said Boonen. âThey are going to trade derivatives but still, there is possibly more risk than in trading conventional assets.âÂ
Itâs also worth asking what Renaissance dipping into bitcoin futures means in terms of the leading cryptocurrencyâs correlation to the rest of the financial system, a question highlighted by the recent COVID-19 markets crash that saw crypto fall with the rest of the S&P 500.
From the perspective of a fund like Renaissance, bitcoin remains a very uncorrelated asset, said Numeraiâs Craib.
Read more: Crypto Market Maker B2C2 Hires Wall Street FX Vet to Lead US Expansion
âWhen you are a big fund and you find this liquid market thatâs uncorrelated and can take a lot of trading, you really kind of have to trade it. Because itâll help your Sharpes so much to have a new source of alpha,â he said, alluding to the return from an investment balanced against the risk.
The more things you can trade, the more of an edge it gives you, said Craib, with the aim to create a model that works in every country and every sector of the economy and every commodity.Â
âThen you really have something. You can make a million predictions per day and be right in just over half a million of them. Thatâs much more what Renaissance is trying to do,â he said.