Weekly Newsletter
Aug 28, 2024

Are Institutions Buying the Dip? Is DeFi About to Wake Up?

Bitcoin’s lag already presents itself as an opportunity for market entry. Institutional holdings keep growing, marking the season of accumulation.

Are Institutions Buying the Dip? Is DeFi About to Wake Up?

This Week in Crypto

  • Recession Fears Ease as Bitcoin Awaits Liquidity Surge
  • Bitcoin's "Supply Overhang" Meets Accumulation Season
  • Is DeFi About To Make a Comeback?
  • Arbitrum Introduces Staking

Recession Fears Ease as Bitcoin Awaits Liquidity Surge

Fears that the U.S. economy could be headed toward a recession have exacerbated market volatility over the past few weeks, especially after unemployment claims soared by the end of July. As more comforting indicators followed, these concerns are being contained as inflation in the U.S. shows signs of cooling. The headline inflation indicator presented by the Consumer Price Index came in softer than expected, increasing by 2.9% over the past year against the 3.0% forecasted. Furthermore, wholesale prices of finished goods have increased by 0.2%, and monthly retail sales have increased by 1%, exceeding expectations. On top of that, the labor market is also playing a role in taming recession fears, as last week’s data showed that fewer Americans, around 227K, have filed for weekly unemployment insurance claims. 

A strong labor market combined with strong sales has cleared up uncertainty around an immediate recession. In response, Goldman Sachs reduced its estimated likelihood of a U.S. recession to 20% after rising to 25% when unemployment claims soared to 249K in the last week of July. Now, the market is looking forward to the monthly jobs report coming out on September 6, which would either make or break recession fears. 

More hints into the overarching sentiment around inflation within the Federal Reserve are expected to surface on many occasions as several Fed leaders prepare to address the public this week. More importantly, the FOMC meeting minutes are coming out on Wednesday, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak at the anticipated Jackson Hole on Friday. 

How did the markets react to the latest reassuring flow of data? Equities rallied following the positive retail and labor market data, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq increasing by 3.67% and 4.38% over the past week. On the other hand, Gold hit an all-time high on Friday, potentially pricing in a rate cut in the next meeting on September 18. The CME FedWatch tool gauges a 77.5% likelihood the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by 25 basis points. However, Bitcoin’s price is yet to catch up to the sentiment. 

Alongside the rate cut, another major catalyst for Bitcoin’s breakout is global central banks' liquidity, measured by M2. The chart below shows that Bitcoin typically hits its lowest point a few months before the global M2 money supply bottoms out. Bitcoin’s price then surges rapidly, often outpacing liquidity growth, and later undergoes a mid-cycle correction as the market realigns. Last week, the Federal Reserve added $2B to its balance sheets. While past performances aren't indicative of future prices, the presence of Bitcoin spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the world’s biggest financial market is a key catalyst for this scenario. 

 

Figure 1 – Breakout Comparison: Bitcoin and Global Liquidity (M2)

Source: TradingView

So why has Bitcoin continued to underperform even as macroeconomic challenges have seemingly eased?

Bitcoin’s “Supply Overhang” Meets Accumulation Season

One key reason for Bitcoin's lag is the so-called “supply overhang.” For instance,  Mt. Gox is currently repaying its creditors while Genesis distributes $4B in crypto and cash. Most recently, the U.S. government moved 10K BTC from Silk Road's seized assets to a Coinbase Prime wallet. 

Nevertheless, Bitcoin’s lag already presents itself as an opportunity for market entry. Institutional holdings keep growing, marking the season of accumulation. For instance, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley bagged a combined $600M worth of Bitcoin. Two weeks ago, the latter started offering Bitcoin spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to its network of 15K financial advisors. 

Another proxy is governmental interest in investing in companies with heavy exposure to BTC. Respectively, the Norwegian and Swiss national banks bought 1.1M and 466K shares of MicroStrategy, an American software company and one of Bitcoin’s staunchest holders with 226.5K BTC. Established in 1989, MicroStrategy’s investment in Bitcoin dates back to August 2020, when the company integrated BTC into its corporate strategy as a reserve asset, citing declining returns from cash and a weakening dollar, among other global macroeconomic factors. The company is, therefore, often viewed as a way to gain indirect exposure to Bitcoin, which has ultimately made its price highly correlated with the cryptoasset. 

Moving to on-chain data, the chart below shows that long-term Bitcoin holders are shifting their sails toward accumulation. In the last week alone, Bitcoin holders who have held onto their assets for at least 115 days added approximately 125.5K BTC to their supply. As shown in the chart below, the total supply held by long-term holders broke the pattern on August 5, not surprisingly, and started its longest uptrend of accumulation since June 21. 

Figure 2 – Long-term Bitcoin holders start their longest accumulation trend since June 21

Source: Glassnode

Fundamentally, one exciting development might help Bitcoin break out of its $57-59K pattern. The network’s leading scalability solution, Stacks, is preparing for an upgrade that will go live on August 28. Labeled Nakamoto, Stacks’ upgrade is designed to improve transaction speed, enhance security by tying finality to Bitcoin, and resist miner manipulation. 

Not only will Nakamoto make the Stacks blockchain more robust and efficient, but it will unlock Bitcoin’s capabilities to house its iteration of decentralized finance (DeFi). A key component of the Nakamoto upgrade is sBTC, a synthetic derivative with a decentralized, two-way peg mechanism with Bitcoin. A decentralized peg allows BTC to become a productive asset by being deployed in applications like decentralized BTC-based lending and BTC-backed stablecoins, among others. 

Stacks is not the only player setting new primitives on the oldest crypto network. With their mainnet going live on August 22, Babylon is arguably Bitcoin’s most anticipated protocol that would allow BTC holders for the first time to utilize their idle assets to secure proof-of-stake systems like Ethereum, via re-staking. Over $9B worth of BTC is being utilized across DeFi in the shape of wrapped tokens; this sets the stage for how Bitcoin-native liquidity solutions could boost the demand for the asset, especially concerning security. As demonstrated, while institutions and long-term holders buy the dip and central banks invest in its industry, the Bitcoin ecosystem is growing into its full on-chain potential. 

Is DeFi About To Make a Comeback?

As the market shifts its attention away from memecoins, the DeFi sector is beginning to show signs of revitalization. For example, despite the typical slowdown during the summer, Uniswap achieved a new peak in daily active users, reaching nearly 900K in the last week of July, as depicted in Figure 3 below. Although this has since decreased slightly to around 700K, it underscores the enduring relevance and utilization of DeFi, demonstrating its alignment with market needs even during the lackluster price performance of several DeFi tokens. 

 

Figure 3: Uniswap Total Number of Active Users

Source: Artemis

 This renewed interest in DeFi is further evidenced by the decentralized exchange (DEX) to centralized exchange (CEX) trading ratio, which almost eclipsed its all-time high (ATH) of 14% in July. Similarly, the total number of weekly borrowers across all of Aave’s deployments reached a new ATH, showing that DeFi’s building blocks are now playing a much bigger role in the crypto economy amidst the absence of Centralized Finance (CeFi) platforms like Genesis, BlockFi, Celsius and the rest of the defunct service providers. 

Comparatively, the resurgence of DeFi is not just limited to increased usage. Aave, currently the third-largest lending protocol by Total Value Locked (TVL), exemplifies this trend. It has outperformed Ethereum, experiencing a growth of 23%, while Ethereum declined by 11% over the last two weeks. This notable performance is primarily attributed to Aave's newly proposed fee-switch mechanism, which includes two essential components:

  • Profit Distribution: Excess profits would be distributed to AAVE token stakers, providing a direct benefit to long-term supporters of the protocol.
  • Token Buyback: The protocol would purchase AAVE tokens from the secondary market, thus creating a new source of demand for the token. 

That said, the proposal is currently undergoing a feedback-gathering phase before proceeding to an on-chain temperature check vote. If approved, this initiative could mark a significant shift for DeFi tokens, addressing longstanding concerns about their practical value. It may also inspire other prominent protocols like Lido, Compound, and Maker to consider similar changes. While Maker grew year-to-date, it stands out as an exception among DeFi tokens that have faced substantial drawdowns, as it was also considered a proxy for tokenization throughout the year. Nevertheless, it's worth highlighting that Aave’s update is just one of several promising developments that could revitalize the sector. Thus, stay tuned for our next newsletter, which will delve deeper into broader DeFi trends and developments.  

Despite underwhelming price action year-to-date: AAVE +2%, LDO -60%, UNI -20%, the DeFi sector's fundamentals are strengthening. This disconnect between market valuation and underlying robustness is not uncommon, as prices often lag behind fundamental improvements. The recent ETH ETF approval validates the broader application ecosystem, potentially spotlighting DeFi as a crypto sector with proven product-market fit in consumer applications. Combined with waning memecoin speculation, these factors may soon catalyze renewed interest in DeFi assets.

So, what else can help push the sector’s adoption to cross the chasm? Two key developments:

  1. The arrival of Blinks to the Ethereum ecosystem
  2. Apple’s new policy around its Near-Field-Communication (NFC) technology  

For Blinks, you can check our June Review for a brief recap. In short, it’s a mechanism to transform any on-chain action into a shareable link, enabling seamless crypto-native transactions from any webpage. While Blinks was uniquely deployed on Solana, OKX Wallet partnered with the developmental team behind the feature to expand it across all the EVM-compatible chains the wallet provider supports. This is significant given that OKX boasts the second-highest number of weekly active traders, as seen below in Figure 4, second only to Metamask. This will have far-reaching implications as interacting with DeFi will be just a click away - removing the need to visit multiple web pages. At the same time, integrations with social media platforms will ensure that DeFi becomes more accessible to a much broader audience.

Figure 4: Total Number of Weekly Active traders across Crypto’s Wallet Providers

Source: Dune 

Finally, Apple’s new policy addressing its NFC technology could play a key role in pushing the adoption of crypto’s railways to the next level. To recap, Apple will allow third-party developers to access the iPhone’s NFC for contactless transactions. Initially limited to Apple Pay and Wallet, developers will be able to leverage tap-to-pay functionality within their apps in exchange for a commercial fee. This is consequential as it means:

  1. Crypto wallet apps can offer tap-to-pay, thus simplifying crypto-native interactions like never before.
  2. Streamline usage of stablecoins while leveraging DeFi’s infrastructure in the backend without the user’s awareness.
  3. Allow crypto-native payment systems to rival traditional apps while accelerating the next phase of crypto’s infrastructure adoption.   

Arbitrum Staking Proposal 

On August 15, the Arbitrum DAO approved a proposal to implement ARB staking, with 91% of participants voting in favor. While the full implementation details are slated for release in October, here's an overview of the proposal's key objectives:

  • Token holders will be able to stake their tokens in exchange for a synthetic token stARB
  • While revenue won’t be shared immediately from the offset, stARB will automcompound future rewards, including sequencer fees, and will be “re-stakable”.
  • stARB will be compatible with a suite of DeFi applications to further unlock utility. 

The proposed mechanism aims to boost engagement in the protocol's governance, addressing the current low participation rate of under 10%. This low engagement poses risks, particularly in light of recent governance attacks on well-funded treasuries. A notable example is the Compound incident, where a malicious actor nearly succeeded in draining approximately $24M in COMP tokens from the treasury by colluding with other bad actors.

However, the proposal not only encourages greater participation in governance but also addresses a critical limitation of Layer 2 network tokens, which often lack utility. By implementing this mechanism, we anticipate that the scaling solutions vertical composed of more than 60 protocols will adopt similar models, mitigating the severe devaluation some tokens have faced. In summary, this proposal could have consequential impact in terms of boosting governance and spurring tokenomics innovation across the scaling solutions ecosystem by transforming these tokens into revenue-generating assets akin to ETH.

This Week’s Calendar

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