• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
Eurozone bond yields rose 3-4 basis points after a European Central Bank survey showed that consumers significantly raised their inflation expectations in March.On April 28, the State Council Information Office held a regular policy briefing to introduce the "Opinions on Promoting the Expansion and Quality Improvement of the Service Industry." Shen Zhulin, Vice Chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, stated that during the 15th Five-Year Plan period, local governments will be guided to promote the construction of urban parking facilities in a categorized manner, with a focus on older residential areas. This will involve revitalizing existing resources and exploring idle and marginal land resources to support the construction or renovation of parking facilities, thereby helping to address the parking difficulties.April 28 – A survey released by the European Central Bank (ECB) on Tuesday showed that eurozone banks tightened credit access in the three months to March and expect it to continue tightening this quarter, driven by the Iranian conflict pushing up energy prices and financing costs. The ECBs quarterly bank credit survey of 21 eurozone countries showed that financing conditions began to deteriorate after the outbreak of the conflict in Iran in late February. Banks tightened their lending standards more than expected, particularly for businesses, the most significant tightening since the third quarter of 2023. The ECB stated, "A rise in risk perceptions of the economic outlook and a decline in banks risk tolerance were the main reasons, with banks noting in an open-ended question that geopolitical and energy developments put pressure on credit tightening." The bank added, "Some banks also reported additional tightening pressure related to exposure to energy-intensive businesses and the Middle East." The ECB said that banks expect credit standards to tighten "generally and more significantly" further in the three months to June.On April 28, Ke Jixin, Vice Minister of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), stated at a State Council policy briefing that the MIIT will further implement General Secretary Xi Jinpings important instructions on service industry development and the spirit of the National Service Industry Conference, promoting the extension of producer services towards specialization and the high end of the value chain, and accelerating the innovative development of the software and information technology service industry. Specifically, regarding the application of artificial intelligence in the information service industry, the MIIT will launch a special action plan for "Artificial Intelligence + Software," accelerate the research and application of intelligent programming, and cultivate new business models such as Model as a Service (MAS) and Intelligent Agent as a Service (IAS). The MIIT will further strengthen the construction of the open-source ecosystem and promote the intelligent upgrading of basic software and industrial software. It will also deepen the implementation of the Industrial Internet Innovation and Development Project, orderly promote the deployment of computing power and the construction of edge computing power, and improve the intelligent computing cloud service system. Finally, the MIIT will implement the Industrial Data Foundation Building Action, constructing a number of high-quality datasets in the industrial field.On April 28, Zhang Li, Assistant Minister of Commerce, stated at a State Council policy briefing that China has been and will continue to improve the negative list management system for cross-border service trade, proactively aligning with high-standard international trade and economic rules, orderly relaxing market access restrictions in the service sector, breaking down barriers to cross-border service trade, and promoting the convenient and safe flow of capital, personnel, data, and other factors closely related to service trade across borders. China will also coordinate the construction of major open cooperation platforms such as national service trade innovation and development demonstration zones, strengthen institutional innovation and policy integration, and generate a number of replicable and scalable demonstration experiences.

Cryptoverse: Bleeding bitcoin’s holding out for a hero

Jimmy Khan

Aug 30, 2022 14:42

微信截图_20220830143555.png


A deflating end to August has forced the market to confront the Big Bitcoin Question: where will a real rally come from?


Right now, doughty retail investors are looking like the most likely source of relief, as institutional players get cold feet in the midst of a macro maelstrom.


The amount of “illiquid bitcoin” across the market – held by wallets that rarely spend or sell – has risen by 73,840 bitcoin over the past week, the largest weekly increase for more than two months, according to Chainalysis data. That equates to roughly $1.7 billion at recent prices.


Furthermore, the amount of bitcoin held for over a year has increased by 54,300 on average in the last four weeks, the largest rise in about four months, Chainalysis said. Meanwhile, cryptocurrency exchanges have seen net outflows for three straight months as investors pulled their tokens into “cold storage” rather than selling, according to Arcane Research.


“It’s clear that longer-term holders at the retail level are also accumulating, the number of wallets holding relatively small amounts of bitcoin is indeed growing,” said Jay Fraser, head of strategy at BSTX securities exchange.


“Don’t underestimate the impact of the retail HODLers,” Fraser added, referring to a cohort whose name emerged years ago from a trader misspelling “hold” on an online forum. “Their lack of selling helps to create more scarcity so that, eventually, a supply shock for bitcoin will again play out.”

Institutions ‘drove market down’

So what about those deep-pocketed institutional players that jumped on the crypto bandwagon when prices were high?


They have been selling hard, according to some market participants who say these big investors have been the primary driver of the crypto slump over recent months.


In the week to Aug. 19 – the week that saw bitcoin slide anew – the digital asset investment products favored by traditional institutional finance players saw outflows of around $9 million according to Coinshares data.


“The latecomers – institutions that came in close to the highs or the $30,000 to $50,000 levels – they’re the ones that drove the market down, mostly,” said Ed Hindi, chief investment officer at Tyr Capital Partners.


Hindi pointed to a steep discount between futures contract prices and the bitcoin spot price on the CME exchange as further evidence of institutional bearishness.


The discount for the most traded contract hit an all-time low of 3.36% last week, Arcane Research analysts said.

‘READY TO BUY THE DIP’

But don’t count institutional players out – there’s plenty of evidence they haven’t given up on bitcoin, which is down a whopping 70% since its all-time high of $69,000 touched in November, and has lost 56% since the start of 2022.


Some market watchers point to the decision of BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, to launch a private bitcoin investment product specifically for institutional investors as a strong sign that demand remains strong and could drag crypto out of the doldrums.


Andy Edstrom, managing director of Swan Advisor Services, said his firm had continued to see interest from financial advisors and their clients in bitcoin investments despite some “fair weather interest” going away.


“Some advisors are ready to buy the dip, they’re telling us ‘I’ve got dry powder to invest in $20,000 bitcoin’,” he added.