The recent surge in bitcoin and the broader crypto market is primarily driven by retail and speculative institutional investors buying both gold and bitcoin futures rather than investors shifting from gold to bitcoin, according to JPMorgan analysts.
Since their launch earlier this year, spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds have seen heavy inflows, while gold ETFs have witnessed outflows. This leads to the general interpretation that investors are shifting from gold to bitcoin, but that isn’t the case, JPMorgan analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou wrote in a report on Thursday. Instead, retail and institutional investors have been purchasing both gold and bitcoin futures, leading to the rally, the analysts said.
“Beyond retail investors, speculative institutional investors such as hedge funds, including momentum traders such as CTAs [commodity trading advisors], appear to have also propagated the rally by purchasing both gold and bitcoin futures since February, perhaps even more heavily than retail investors,” the analysts said.
JPMorgan’s futures position indicators also imply “a sharp position buildup since February,” amounting to $7 billion in bitcoin futures and $30 billion in gold futures, the analysts said. They attribute this primarily to momentum traders.
Gold ETF outflows: Not a new phenomenon
The JPMorgan analysts noted that gold ETF outflows aren’t a new phenomenon arising this year because of the launch of spot bitcoin ETFs. Instead, “it has been taking place for the past four years since the pandemic,” they said.
Moreover, gold ETF investors aren’t shifting to bitcoin ETFs because they have, in fact, been purchasing more gold but in the form of bars and coins, the analysts said.
“This [gold ETF] outflow trend does not reflect an aversion to gold by private investors such as individuals and family offices, but rather an instrument shift away from physical gold ETFs to bars and coins,” the analysts said. “Privacy and tangibility have become more important considerations for private investors since the pandemic, and physical gold ETFs have a disadvantage in this respect relative to holding bars and coins.”
While shying away from gold ETFs, those private investors have been buying gold bars and coins “in a rather strong and steady manner since the pandemic,” the analysts noted, adding that these purchases have even outpaced gold purchases by central banks.
Spot bitcoin ETFs
As for spot bitcoin ETF inflows, the analysts reiterated that it is primarily a rotational capital shift from existing crypto venues such as crypto exchanges. Recent bitcoin outflows from crypto exchanges corroborate this view, they said.
“Crypto exchanges saw a cumulative bitcoin outflow of around $7 billion since the spot bitcoin ETF launch” in January, the analysts said. “In other words, it is more likely that the net flow from retail investors into the newly created ETFs is closer to $2 billion rather than $9 billion.”
JPMorgan on MicroStrategy’s bitcoin holdings
MicroStrategy’s recent massive bitcoin purchases have also amplified this year’s crypto rally, according to the JPMorgan analysts. Michael Saylor’s company appears to be transforming itself into a leveraged bet on bitcoin by buying the cryptocurrency via the sale of convertible notes. That approach is risky, according to the analysts.
“We believe debt-funded bitcoin purchases by MicroStrategy add leverage and froth to the current crypto rally and raise the risk of more severe deleveraging in a potential downturn in the future,” they concluded.
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