The crypto market has been very active this week -- and that makes sense, considering all that's been going on in the U.S. What's actually happening though -- and why?

A thread about efficient markets.
U.S. government has cared about crypto on and off, but last week felt like a bit of a boiling point. Gensler (SEC chair) started talking about it last week -- one of the topics he addressed was Bitcoin ETFs, and look at the GBTC premium -- hit from -6% to -12% or so on 8/3.
And BTC got hit by his comments, too. There were very plausibly other things going on, of course, but these comments -- in addition to the first the market heard of the infrastructure bill amendments -- drove the market down last week.
And then, just like we always do, we saw the markets recover some right away. Prices just ALWAYS over-react to news, regardless of what it is -- we saw it with Elon, we saw it with China, we've seen it before from U.S. news, and we saw it here.
We see this every time, partially because of our usual friend liquidations. When organic price action occurs, it triggers *some* liquidations in the same direction, amounting to (in this case) more net selling than anyone "wanted" to do, and so there's some reversion.
But we also see it, I think, because the crypto trading markets are immature and just not efficient. The big firms which would arb this stuff away in traditional finance aren't yet, and so we're able to stay in these paradigms where news is CONSISTENTLY over-bought or -sold.
(It's the same effect that lets, e.g., buying before the ETH fork be correct -- somehow, "buy right before a big event" is STILL correct, even though everyone knows about it and it "should" be arbed out.)
So, anyway, the market recovered because we collectively decided Gensler / Yellen / whoever had had too much impact. But that's not all that was going on. Different variations of the amendment were getting tossed around, some good / bad for different segments of the space.
A revised version of the amendment would "target" non-PoW chains -- and take a look at the ETH/BTC chart as that was evolving. Worth noting, of course, ETH was up a LOT after its fork, but still, this is pretty extreme under-performance.
As things were getting hammered out -- different versions of the amendment were floated (generally aiming to remove the broad definitions of the word "broker" etc. -- I won't go into details here) -- and BTC sort of ... kept going up.
(There was a brief detour over the weekend as, sort of, nothing was happening and some buying momentum died out as excitement died down a little. Gold also randomly got crushed which probably didn't help? But mostly I think excitement died a bit, as it recovered on Monday AM.)
Why? Partly the whole crypto market was reacting to the possibility of better terms in the amendment. If the newly proposed versions could get approved, that would be an awesome step toward U.S. regulatory bodies working "with us" instead of the opposite, and that's a big update.
And I think that was borne out today when the "good version" of the amendment did not go through (unanimous consent was required here, which, BTW, is insane). We saw a SHARP drop right away, which suggests this is part of what the rally was pinned on.
But let's zoom out again. If that was all that was happening ... why are we still >$45k?

I think the specifics of this amendment (which might still pass later!) matter, but not THAT much.
I'm in tune with crypto news because I have to be, and sometimes it's hard to keep perspective about what the "real world" cares about. This week? The real world cared about crypto, too.
A crypto-centric amendment has been the biggest thing going on, and it's front-page news of, like, real newspapers and websites. The Senate is taking this seriously, and now they're going to KEEP taking it seriously -- and not in an overly negative way.
I think THAT is what the market is reacting to -- the idea that we've "made it" -- and if crypto stays as relevant as it has been (critically, in ways which are not *really bad* regulatorily, but "neutral" is seeming sufficient to me), I suspect the market will continue to do so.

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More from @AlamedaTrabucco

3 Aug
What Alameda is trying to do still astounds me, to some degree. A tiny team -- ten people, at some points, not even triple that now -- trying to build the world's best crypto quant trading firm, and OTC desk, and MM service, all 24/7. It sounds impossible.
Even more astounding is that we actually do it. Day in, day out, our models are still (almost) always fantastic, our quotes (almost) always live, our trades (almost???) always good. I've never seen a team as talented and dedicated as ours -- I'm not sure I've heard of one.
I was mostly expecting the team to be impressive in the typical ways -- everyone who pre-dated me and everyone we've hired since has been super smart, clearly talented, etc.

I'm blown away by how far we've pushed ourselves.
Read 9 tweets
28 Jul
For a few weeks, BTC was boring -- it only moved like 10% over the course of (plural) days. I hope you all caught up on sleep, because crypto is now fun again! What exactly has been going on?

A thread about the calm and the storm.
On Sunday night, BTC bounded up quite fast -- it rallied steadily from $34k to $36k or so, and then shot RIGHT up to $40k all at once. What's the story there?
I think a few small effects combined here. First, there was some vague positive sentiment:
- Elon is in a "he loves us" phase
- Now maybe Amazon is in too? Maybe not but, like, maybe?
- China FUD in general, maybe they'll buy BTC instead?
Read 15 tweets
21 Jul
Up until the last day or so, the market has been stuck in a fairly consistent "zone" for a bit now. It's honestly been sorta ... boring?

A thread about X.
Why did the market fall yesterday? I don't have the most compelling answer for you, but I can tell you how Alameda is thinking about things.
NEWS

There's been a decent build-up of negative news, I guess -> Elon chilled on BTC, China cracked down for the nth time, GBTC unlock is maybe negative to many? And then a few other things.
Read 13 tweets
6 Jul
How is it possible that it was correct for this plane to board 2 hours ago and then sit on the runway because of rain they already knew about
I’m like 60% sure the pilot is gonna have worked long enough that they force us to deplane and get a new pilot in another hour or two and I’m currently arranging a bloc to charter private if that happens AMA
People are replying with too many realistic explanations I’m worried my intent here wasn’t conveyed well
Read 7 tweets
23 Jun
Word on the street is: this price graph is fucked up. What happened?

A thread about the calm, the storm, and how to tell the difference.
There have been a few prevailing narratives lately:
- China FUD driving prices down, U.S. maybe to follow?
- Bitcoin is bad for the environment, or at least Elon thinks so
- Maybe with this dip, some of the institutions who bought are under water and need to sell? (Saylor, etc.)
None of that is concrete, though, and people vacillate between over-stating the pieces of news they want to hear and under-stating the ones they don't. So let's break it down a little, and look at some stuff which *is* concrete.
Read 19 tweets
16 Jun
The macro market DOES drive crypto, but only when it has to. In March 2020, crypto had no choice but to go down with (e.g.) SPY — the whole world was watching, and when the whole world watches people will buy BTC when it lags below SPY, and vice-versa.
Honestly? Crypto traders don’t give a shit about what happens when the traditional markets aren’t going crazy. I literally couldn’t tell you which direction SPY moved .3% in (or whatever) yesterday.
But when SPY crashes 20%? Yeah, we’ve gotta follow it. And because we’re following it, our trades will follow it — not all the time, but enough for a correlation to exist.
Read 8 tweets

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