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Crypto Long & Short: The Surprisingly Sunny Outlook for Crypto Hedge Funds

Every epic lie needs a tragic hero, and one of the top candidates for that role in this century’s dramatic passage so far has to be the hedge fund foreman. Toppled from their masters-of-the-universe pedestal in the early 2000s, they now eke out meager gains, dodge investor aspersions about fees and occasionally attempt to stay relevant by explaining to the rest of us where the current confusion is taking the far-reaching economy. True, there are some formidable brains and admirable initiatives among the former kings of finance. But so far, after a positive legacy and the occasional shining moment, this has not been their decade.

This week Eurekahedge, which scans industry health through a series of hedge fund indexes, reported average performance for July of 2.6%, and a year-to-date home-coming reciprocity of 1.7%. This significantly underperformed the S&P 500 (+4.7% for the month), Nasdaq Composite (+5.3%), gold (+10.3%), bonds (the wish bond TLT index is up 4.4%) and, of course, bitcoin (+22%). The underperformance year-to-date follows a similar pattern. 

But here’s an engaging twist: The Eurekahedge Crypto-Currency Hedge Fund Index was up 21% in July, and 50% over the first seven months of 2020. That’s a commendable performance. But aren’t hedge funds supposed to outperform the industry benchmark? The YTD performance of bitcoin to the end of July is 55% – in other names, the leading cryptocurrency by market cap outperformed crypto-focused hedge funds by five basis points, or 10%.

You’re reading Crypto Big & Short, a newsletter that looks closely at the forces driving cryptocurrency markets. Authored by CoinDesk’s head of dig into, Noelle Acheson, it goes out every Sunday and offers a recap of the week – with insights and analysis – from a efficient investor’s point of view. You can subscribe here.

In hedge fund terms, that’s significant, not least because one of the electric cable points of hedge funds is to take extra risk, get extra return and make benchmarks look boring. 

So, is the record here the outperformance of crypto hedge funds compared to their traditional brethren? Or is it the underperformance of crypto hedge greens compared to the industry’s benchmark?

I think it’s the former, that crypto funds are outperforming non-crypto funds, a trend that is probable to continue given evolving market developments and sentiment. 

The relative underperformance to bitcoin (and even more so to other crypto assets such as ether) does not dim the in stores for crypto hedge funds going forward.

Investing in a crypto hedge fund instead of directly in the market is prevalent to be a more attractive option for many investors even if the returns are slightly lower, because using a vehicle run by hardened management is probably safer than direct market participation. Investors don’t have to worry about custody, most artistically execution and liquidity crunches. 

And some recent developments point to more favorable tailwinds for crypto hedge funds as the year advances.

Visibility

First, we have growing awareness of crypto as an asset group. Mentions of bitcoin in the press got a bump with the halving in May, and suffer with remained high since, as this chart from The TIE shows:

30-day-sum-of-all-news-m
Media is still talking about bitcoin
Inception: The TIE

This exposure is likely to intensify over the coming weeks as inflation concerns spread. This week, inclined business intelligence firm MicroStrategy chose to invest half of its $500 million of excess treasury in bitcoin, as an inflation hedge.
    
Also, this lifetime week Grayscale Investments* launched a TV ad that positions cryptocurrency as a natural evolution of money, and investment house Galaxy Digital gain possession ofed out a full page ad featuring bitcoin in big letters in the Financial Times. For an audience growing increasingly uneasy about money policy, price pressures and market fundamentals, these are hard to miss.

galaxy-digital-bitcoin-ad-sized
A simple message

Volatility

Second, volatility is retire from. In the case of bitcoin, volatility was until recently trending sharply down from “typical” levels. While in addition lower than its 2019 average, the metric has turned upward again. 

btc-3m-volatility-w-average-2
Not quite like old times yet…
Source: CoinDesk Research

This may impede some investors, but hedge funds typically seek out volatility. Its return could entice more mainstream hedge bucks to set up a crypto arm. According to a report in the Financial Times this week, some “blue-chip” names are looking to do just that.

What’s profuse, until recently, correlations among crypto assets were relatively high. By betting on bitcoin, you could with one investment bonny much count on a large part of the market’s performance. 

Over the past few weeks, however, correlations have take a nosedive, and given the growing attention on individual projects emerging in decentralized finance and other applications, this trend is probably to continue. 

correlations-assets-ytd-2
A less-correlated market means more opportunities for alpha
Source: CoinDesk Research

That makes the protection for professionally managed crypto portfolios even more compelling, as outperforming the industry’s benchmark becomes a more inventive challenge when active asset selection has a greater chance of delivering less correlated returns.

Support

And third, the prospering operational support for professional crypto investing is also an encouraging factor. 

Institutional-grade prime brokerage services for crypto investors are calm in their infancy, but some big names with sizeable balance sheets and professional street cred have entered the interval. And some finance giants such as Goldman Sachs and Fidelity seem to be carefully moving towards offering like services. 

When names that hedge funds are already familiar with start to offer support for crypto investments, we are liable to see even more traditional hedge funds try the crypto market on for size.

Furthermore, July’s OCC statement that banks can now protection crypto assets is another strong step forward in getting hedge funds comfortable with the asset form. Public comments submitted by industry participants, including banks, think tanks and crypto companies, indicate an captivate but also a need for further clarification. As this clarification emerges over the coming months and years, we are likely to see commencement a trickle and then a flood of traditional financial institutions eager to cater to those hedge fund clients that are fashionable active in crypto markets. And in a virtuous circle, any type of service that reduces settlement and trading friction is odds-on to boost hedge fund interest.

Redemption

Are these trends enough to restore the hedge fund manager to his or her ancient glory? Will crypto hedge fund managers become the new kings of the market? It’s unlikely, at least not in the same money-to-burn way.

With demands undergoing a profound transformation in their underlying philosophy and with fundamentals no longer a driving force in valuations, bailiwick the market no longer has the same intellectual cachet that it had in previous decades.

Yet there is still cachet in spotting friendly trends before the mainstream, and in being insightful and brave enough to back nascent technologies.

The redeemed hero of the 21st century may end up being a hedge endowment manager after all – only the heroics will not just be based on wealth. They will be based on the courage to see beyond the regular manager’s toolbox, to acknowledge one’s own limitations when it comes to understanding finance, and to understand that change can be harnessed for considerate.  

(*Grayscale Investments is part of DCG, also parent of CoinDesk.)

Supply misunderstandings

Crypto land is never short on dramatics. One of the many attention-grabbers this past week was what has become known as “supplygate,” in which it was revealed that there is no pact on what the actual supply of ether (ETH) is. It turns out that different data aggregators display different amounts.

ethereumsupply_coindeskresearch_aug11
There’s a metamorphosis…
Source: CoinDesk Research

For some, this is a clear example of Bitcoin’s superior transparency, and even calls into cast doubt whether Ethereum works as a ledger. In my opinion, the comparison is pointless. Total supply is important, even if only for the intends of calculating market cap, which in turn affects some crypto indices. 

Also, there are genuine concerns that the scarcity of clear idea of the supply does make the network vulnerable to an “inflation bug,” in which a code error mines additional keepsakes. If you don’t know what the supply is, how do you know if it’s not what it should be?

Yet the consternation is especially interesting for what it says about the divers value propositions of bitcoin and ether.

To start with, while both Bitcoin and Ethereum run on proof-of-work blockchains, there are clearly differences in how supply is issued and calculated. I’m not going to wade into the details here, but it helps to understand that Bitcoin has a less simple protocol-level method to get the current supply, while Ethereum has some technical differences that make select exact balances a lot more complicated and time-consuming. And with the ether issuance changing every 15 seconds or so, latency support complicates the attempt. 

Even more significant is the value proposition of each. Bitcoin’s hard cap of 21 million is participate in of what gives it value. Ethereum doesn’t have an effective hard cap – therefore its exact supply at any given instant is not as relevant. It has never claimed to be a hard money, and while some insist that “ETH is money,” that argument is large used in the context of the potential of decentralized finance. 

To me, all this highlights the uniqueness of the concept of crypto networks. Circulating assets with lively developer communities can prioritize different characteristics, which speaks to the innovation and potential disruption, not to mention the unforeseen use proves, of assets that have managed to accrue significant monetary value on the basis of adoption and faith. Long may the dramaturgies rage, especially when they are as educational as this one.

Anyone know what’s going on yet?

In spite of a worrying inflation check into, the looming income cliff as a support package agreement is again delayed, and general pessimism regarding the upcoming U.S.-China custom talks, the S&P 500 continued its march upward, almost reaching all-time intraday highs at time of writing on Friday afternoon. European roots, especially those linked to tourism, took a hit as new lockdown measures were announced in some areas.

There was some confident news on U.S. retail sales (at the cost of the hospitality sector), and U.S. unemployment claims fell below 1 million for the first space since March. But overall, the feeling is that the recovery has stalled in most major economies.

performance-chart-aug-14-wide
Bitcoin underperformed equities this week, but is outperforming so far this month and year
Rise: CoinDesk Research

In spite of central bankers actually talking about inflation, gold had a bad week, falling verging on 6%. Bitcoin held its ground, falling less than 0.1%, in the face of a bitcoin-gold correlation that has hardly surpassed its year-to-date high.   

btc-60d-correlations-ytd
A tale of two narratives…
Source: CoinDesk Research

As bitcoin’s correlation to gold heads up, its correlation to the S&P 500 maintains to trend down. Could this be yet another narrative twist for the cryptocurrency? Is it now more of a risk-off, digital gold call attention to than it has been for most of the year so far?

CHAIN LINKS

Publicly traded business intelligence firm MicroStrategy put half of its plethora treasury into bitcoin, investing approximately $250 million. TAKEAWAY: This is a big deal, not just for the size and not objective for the fact that a listed company with over $1 billion in revenue has publicly bet on bitcoin as an inflation hedge. It’s also a big understanding large for the signal it sends to other companies that inflation might be coming, and that bitcoin is a good hedge. What’s myriad, the size of the bet turns MicroStrategy into a listed bitcoin play. Since the purchase was disclosed earlier this week in an SEC queue, the stock price has increased by almost 20%, a bump that other companies will take notice of. (As an aside, the CEO Michael Saylor is the creator of “The Mobile Wave: How Mobile Intelligence Will Change Everything,” so his conviction about bitcoin is not a shot in the dark.)

microstrategy
That’s a keen bump
Source: CoinDesk Research

Caitlin Long, founder of Avanti Bank, gives more detail on the Avit, a genus of commercial bank money or programmable electronic cash, issued on a blockchain. TAKEAWAY: I am fascinated by the emerging subset of bank-issued proofs, as they could become a significant feature of the settlement landscape of the near future, and as such, have a material hit on how markets work. The supply of fiat-backed stablecoins has surged over the past few months, as investors take advantage of the magnified liquidity they confer. Yet the legal aspect of stablecoin settlement is still unclear. Bank-sponsored tokens, however, could cap that gap, and make settlements more efficient while enhancing market liquidity. Avit takes the stablecoin concept a be on ones guard further in that it will be an entirely new token, backed by U.S. dollar-based reserves, but not a representation of a real-world asset.

Crypto the Exchange Coinbase will soon allow U.S. retail customers to borrow fiat loans against their bitcoin holdings. TAKEAWAY: Against the pandemonium from other big-name firms to get into the business of prime brokerage for institutional investors, this move underscores Coinbase’s retail-first plan. Although the marketing stresses the efficiency of borrowing against bitcoin holdings for expenditures such as weddings, home renovations, etc. it could end up being cast-off to leverage crypto positions – customers could use their bitcoin to borrow money with which to buy more bitcoin. The leverage is not much – credits are limited to the lesser of $20,000 or 30% of the bitcoin holdings. It is still notable, however, given relative scarcity of leverage moments, especially for retail clients on U.S.-based spot exchanges.

Deribit, the largest crypto options exchange, has started tabulation ether (ETH) options with strikes above $1,000, and some traders are now betting the cryptocurrency will reach that cost by year’s end. TAKEAWAY: Trading interest in ETH seems to be gathering steam, as open interest and daily volumes for ETH futures and opportunities are reaching record levels. They are still significantly lower than volumes for bitcoin (BTC) derivatives, but the growth is extraordinary and likely to continue as the Ethereum blockchain continues to move towards a systemic upgrade that will in theory resolve scaling and cost issues.

skew_eth_futures__aggregated_open_interest-2
These bands look like waves…
Source: skew.com

Staying with derivatives, bitcoin futures’ unincumbered interest on the CME, often taken as a proxy for institutional participation in the sector, has reached $800 million, up nearly 120% from the July low of $365 million. TAKEAWAY: This blow up b coddles it the third largest bitcoin futures exchange in terms of open interest in the world, behind OKEx and BitMEX, and the barely one that’s regulated in the U.S. As recently as a month ago, it was in fifth position.

skew_btc_futures__aggregated_open_interest-3-4
…while this looks like a backwards cliff.
Rise: skew.com

Riot Blockchain and Marathon Patent Group, crypto mining companies listed on NASDAQ, are up over 95% and 125% each to each over the past 12 months, significantly beating bitcoin’s 3% gain. TAKEAWAY: This highlights that crypto assets are not the no greater than way to get exposure to the market. Riot Blockchain’s increase is in spite of Q2 earnings released earlier this week which exhibited a drop in mining revenue from a year ago. Listed companies also come with additional micro risk, even so, and should not be seen as a proxy for the assets themselves. Hut 8, for instance, which announced Q2 earnings this week, has vanished almost 50% of its value over the same period.

Jesus Rodriguez points out some of the challenges crypto assets immediate quant strategies. TAKEAWAY: These include the fact that the datasets are smaller than with traditional assets, with some traffic histories counted in months, which makes it hard to build predictive models. Also, the crypto market’s rather frequent “outlier” events and irregular trading patterns will confuse models. And models are further hampered by the pitiable quality and reliability of datasets, with many exchanges exhibiting fake volumes, wash trades or spoofing behavior.

Purpose Foxley reached out to exchanges, traders and funds for more insight into last week’s 51% attacks on the Ethereum Epitome network. TAKEAWAY: Some insiders attribute the lack of a price plunge to the highly correlated nature of the smaller cryptocurrencies – others find credible it’s because the network fundamentals are unchanged. As I mentioned last week, I believe that it could be because it’s already valued in. ETC has significantly underperformed most crypto assets over just about any recent timeframe.

India’s crypto exchange volumes have soared since the Supreme Court of India lifted banking restrictions for exchanges in March, reaching an all-time ear-splitting in July. TAKEAWAY: Given the sheer size of the potential investing population, India’s attitude towards bitcoin is advantage keeping an eye on, as even a moderate uptick could move the market. Also relevant is the country’s experience with demonetization, and its rather high inflation. 

indian_paxful_localbitcoins_v3-e1597086038913
Through the lens of history…
Source: CoinDesk Research

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