Macro Deep Dive ft Dylan LeClair - FED 84
Fed Watch - Bitcoin and Macro - Un pódcast de Bitcoin Magazine
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In this episode of Bitcoin Magazine’s Fed Watch podcast, CK and I continue our monthly series with Dylan LeClair, author of the Deep Dive report. We had the opportunity to go over the metrics in the bitcoin market that he is watching and is an expert in. They have a free version of the report that comes out daily, and an exclusive paid version monthly and yearly. Follow along with his slide deck here. Fed Watch is a podcast for people interested in central bank current events. Bitcoin will consume central banks one day, understanding and documenting how that is happening is what we are about here at Fed Watch. Bitcoin’s Correlation to Stocks and VIX The first topic we cover in this episode and the first topic from the January issue of the Deep Dive is bitcoin’s correlation to stocks and the volatility measure, the VIX. Dylan describes why this correlation has appeared over the last year and what it can tell us about the health of the bitcoin market. Grayscale GBTC and Bitcoin Price One of the bigger topics we talk about with Dylan is Grayscale and the effect this market behemoth has on the bitcoin price. LeClair walked us through this product and its effect on the market. We talked about major institutions, AKA market makers, that could have been caught on the wrong side of this trade, as the large price premium that was facilitating “risk free” arbitrage suddenly changed to a discount. Bitcoin On-Chain Analysis of Liquid Circulating Supply As the name suggests, the Deep Dive is an in-depth report, going into very specific metrics about the bitcoin network. One of those is, what I interpret as, the liquidity of circulating supply and its correlation to price. As you can see in the chart above, the shaped areas represent coins that have moved within a 3-month period. It is related to velocity, but where velocity is concerned with the number of transactions, liquidity of circulating supply is a percent of the total supply that has moved at least once. The percentage of supply that becomes liquid begins to ramp up as the price approaches peaks, and resets lower as price consolidates. The pattern is emerging of lower top-level circulating supply and lower lows. That makes sense if we think in terms of purchasing power at the tops and bottoms. In other words, each peak is a lower number of satoshis but a higher level of purchasing power, since the price is significantly higher. And vice versa, the lows are a lower number of satoshis but a higher level of purchasing power. If bitcoin is going to continue appreciating in value, we would expect that exact pattern to continue. As new entrants come into the market they will find fewer satoshis to buy, even in times of FOMO. Stablecoins as Collateral and Holders of Sovereign Debt The next part of our discussion blew me away. Dylan brought the rise of stablecoins like