Few seem to be bothered by bitcoinâs volatility on Tuesday, as the No. 1 cryptocurrency by market capitalization declined to the $26,000 level after its first-ever trades above $28,000 on Sunday. Many market participants are convinced retail and institutional investors will push bitcoinâs price higher after the holiday lull.
With limited institutional trading activity during the final days of 2020, traders and analysts told CoinDesk the recent price movement has been largely driven by retail investors.
âItâs quite unusual for the past whole week being like this, given itâs a holiday season. Usually during the holiday season thereâs a liquidity crunch,â Mable Jiang, principal at crypto hedge fund Multicoin Capital, told CoinDesk. âThe heat was partially driven by the recent run-up of bitcoin, and the resurfacing retail interest in the market, at least in China.â
Jiang noticed a few patterns in recent trading activity among retail investors. Some are rolling alt-coins into bitcoin and ether. Others are looking for coins that may potentially outperform bitcoin on returns in the coming months.
In TradeBlockâs weekly market commentary on Dec. 28, the cryptocurrency analysis firm wrote that recent highs for bitcoin and ether were driven by outflows from XRP.
âThe only two digital currencies the [Securities and Exchange Commission] has definitely stated are not securities are bitcoinâ and ether, TradeBlock said. âAs regulatory uncertainty increased in the alt-coin market after the SECâs action [against Ripple Labs, claiming it was trading an illegal security, XRP], traders took the opportunity to pile into more regulatory-certain assets, bitcoin and ether, while maintaining exposure to crypto amidst its one of the strongest bull runs on record.â
Read More: Coinbase to Suspend XRP Trading Following SEC Suit Against Ripple
Yet, even though bitcoinâs price fell below $26,000 in the past 24 hours many market participants appear to be optimistic about the coming weeks and months, especially after investment activity returns after the holidays.
âShould the expected wave of retail flows materialize, I would expect to see bitcoin charge past $30,000 as we enter the new year,â said Denis Vinokourov, head of research at the London-based prime Brokerage Bequant.
Read More: CME Tops in Bitcoin Futures Rankings Amid Rapidly Growing Institutional Interest
Last monthâs price move towards the previous $20,000 resistance level makes a convincing case to support such optimism, according to Chris Thomas, head of digital assets at Swissquote Bank. While small sell-offs occurred three times during that rally (on Nov. 25, Dec. 1 and Dec. 5), prices quickly recovered as a strong demand for bitcoin outweighed the amount of bitcoin sold.
Read More: Whale Sightings Become Scarce, Removing Downward Pressure on Bitcoin: Analyst
âSince then, the bears have been reluctant to sell too much more as the probability is that theyâll be able to sell at higher levels in a few weeks or months,â Thomas said. âI suspect weâll see a $26,500-$27,500 range into the first few days of the New Year. Jan. 4 onwards we should see institutional positions coming back into the market.â
Read More: Grayscale Has $19B in Crypto Assets Under Management, Up From $16.4B Last Week
The second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, ether (ETH) was down Tuesday, trading around $728.59 and down 0.47% in 24 hours as of 21:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET).
Similar to bitcoin, market sentiment for etherâs performance has also remained positive despite the price volatility.
Read More: Ether Trades Above $700 for the First Time Since 2018
âCurrently, [etherâs] trading volume is more than 15% higher than average, further proof that ether is on the rise,â Guy Hirsch, eToroâs U.S. managing director, said. âWe expect the second-biggest crypto asset to continue rallying into the new year, and possibly surpassing $800 sometime during the first half of the year.â
If they arenât doing so already, institutional players could also soon start looking into ether, particularly after the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) said it will launch a futures contract on ether in February 2021. That could bode well for etherâs performance relative to bitcoin, according to some analysts.
Read More: Institutions Will Start Buying Ether in 2021, Messari Analyst Says
âThe imminent introduction of ETH futures from the CME Group should spur additional adoption, especially among financial institutions looking to diversify digital asset holdings with another regulated product they are comfortable with,â Vinokourov said. âThis, combined with [decentralized financeâs] continued surge, should help ETH to outperform BTC for the foreseeable future.â
Retail traders also appear more interested in ether, as the total value locked (TVL) in DeFi, as provided by analytics website DeFi Pulse, reached to $14.47 billion, as of Tuesday.
âFrom the market-making side [on DeFi], we see flows pretty evenly, with slightly more [stablecoins] to ether than the opposite, which I believe indicates that there are still plenty of retail investors trying to jump on the wagon,â said Peter Chan, a trader for Hong Kong-based crypto firm OneBit Quant who is focusing on DeFi trading.
Digital assets on the CoinDesk 20 are mostly in red on Tuesday. Notable winner as of 21:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET):Â
Notable losers:
Equities:
Commodities:
Treasurys: