The Breakdown - Are GBTC Unwinds Bullish or Bearish for Bitcoin?
Episode Date: July 9, 2021NLW explores the debate surrounding the GBTC unlock’s bearish or bullish nature on this episode of “The Breakdown,” including: Historical impacts of market structure on prices GBTC’s infl...uence on markets as its premium attracted investors Analysis of the GBTC unlock bearish vs. bullish debate Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, GBTC is an investment vehicle that allows institutional and public market investors to invest in bitcoin without purchasing the cryptocurrency directly. While many GBTC investors were simply looking for public market exposure to bitcoin, many firms also took a more strategic approach to capture the neutral arbitrage trade of GBTC shares trading at a premium to the native asset value (NAV) of bitcoin. The demand for public market vehicles coupled with a lack of other alternatives placed GBTC at a desirable premium. The GBTC NAV trade was a significant source of buying pressure through the back half of 2020 and the beginning of 2021, but when the premium turned to a discount (thanks to a variety of factors, including competition from other bitcoin proxies in the public markets), that source of buying pressure dried up. When an investor buys into GBTC, their shares are locked up for six months. More than 100,000 bitcoin worth of shares are expected to be released throughout July. The looming flood of shares into secondary markets has sparked a debate on whether the unlock will be bearish or bullish for the spot price of bitcoin. Featuring commentary from Lyn Alden, Loomdart, Willy Woo and more. -- Enjoying this content? SUBSCRIBE to the Podcast Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1438693620?at=1000lSDb Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/538vuul1PuorUDwgkC8JWF?si=ddSvD-HST2e_E7wgxcjtfQ Google: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9ubHdjcnlwdG8ubGlic3luLmNvbS9yc3M= Follow on Twitter: NLW: https://twitter.com/nlw Breakdown: https://twitter.com/BreakdownNLW The Breakdown is sponsored by NYDIG and produced and distributed by CoinDesk.com
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Discussion (0)
the unlock phenomenon is ultimately a pretty transitory phenomenon.
What seems more significant to me is simply acknowledging how tied into the run-up the
RBTC Nav Trade was in the first place.
In other words, the most bearish thing about Grayscale isn't the set of unlocks.
It was the shift from a premium to a discount and the consequent loss of perhaps the biggest
buying pressure we had in the space.
That helped stop the momentum going into the absolute barrage of fud that characterized the last
quarter.
Welcome back to the breakdown.
with me, NLW.
It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin, and the big picture power shifts remaking our world.
The breakdown is sponsored by Nidig and produced and distributed by CoinDesk.
What's going on, guys?
It is Thursday, July 8th, and today we are talking about the latest, greatest debate on Bitcoin Twitter.
Are the grayscale Bitcoin Trust Unwines bullish or bearish for Bitcoin?
Now, as you will well know, I talk a lot on the...
this show about the big picture. Global macro, large patterns of history, where Bitcoin fits as a
disruptive force, how that disruption is connected to other larger global trends. I mean, hell, I actually
used 15th century Genoese merchant networks as a reference point yesterday. And frankly, it took
all my resolve not to go more in depth about how Italian merchants use social capital and social
networks as the grounding for some of the earliest modern economic instruments. And you get the
point. I love some good historical context and I love big patterns. However, hopefully you've also
heard me explain why, because I'm so inclined towards macro-patternistic explanations of things,
I'm always trying to check that impulse with data and with other explanations that don't necessarily
involve some grand narrative or great pattern of history. In particular, when it comes to Bitcoin
and the crypto markets as a whole, I try to spend a little more time on market structure. To better
understand what I mean, let's take an example of one of the market crashes earlier this year,
when, after some combination of Elon backing off BTC and China announcing some ban, Bitcoin spent
the weekend dumping from around 42K all the way back down under 30K. The narrative explanations of this
were plentiful. Elon not only triggered the ESG folks with his new line of environmental inquiry,
he also scared off the institutional and treasury investors who had previously been using Tesla as a model.
China was setting pace for how governments were going to start banning Bitcoin, and so on and so forth.
Here's the thing. It's not that these narratives were wrong. It's that they didn't explain the drama of the
move down we saw. Remember when I had Travis Kling on the show a few months ago. His main thesis,
the thing that was frustrating him then, was the disingenuous nature of a new set of critics.
These critics all effectively shared one thing in common. They pointed to one area of fud or risk and
said, because of this concern, Bitcoin is worth nothing. You should be far, far away.
Travis's point was that as a capital allocator, your job is to price risk, not to throw the
baby out with the bathwater. So to put what happened that week before such a massive rapid
drop in those terms, the larger risk that these events represented was real. But the price of
that risk was absolutely not a 30% drop in a couple of hours. Now, for that, there had to be
some other explanation. There was. For some time now, crypto markets have been led by derivatives
not stop trading, and a big part of crypto trading is trading with leverage. When prices
move quickly down like they did that day, many accounts got margin called and ultimately liquidated.
In other words, because of the terms of the exchanges they were trading with, their collateral
got liquidated to cover their losses. This happened automatically, and as such, ruthlessly
and without feeling. And most importantly, without regard for the price at which the sale happened.
One impact of that was that the liquidations were cascading. That automated forced selling had to move
to lower and lower prices to complete their trades, and as that happened, still others got liquidated
and so on and so forth all the way down. To listen to someone like Sam Tribuco from Alameda Research
discussed this particular event on Luke Martin's podcast, what the market wanted to do that day was
go from 42K or so to around 40K or so. But that 39K or 40K level had been a key level of a lot of people
entering the market on the way up, meaning that it was a key trigger point for liquidations on the
way down. The rest of that 40K to 30K drop wasn't panic selling, it was forced selling.
So to sum this all up, there was a narrative element to that big weekend crash, a repricing of the
risk based on ESG and China concerns around Bitcoin from about 42K to 40K.
But the 25% drop that happened after that was all market structure and leverage liquidations.
So with that setup, let's discuss the market structure question that has most been on people's minds this week.
And that is the question of grayscale Bitcoin Trust, GBT Unlocks.
Let's actually return one more time to that Travis Kling interview and let's play his epic list of all of the risks that exist around Bitcoin.
So much risk present in this.
I spent my whole career in traditional investing, and I stepped into this thing.
And I was just like, holy shit, there's risk all over the place in this.
There's layers of risk, systemic risk, opaque risk, unknowable risk, whales, miners, tether,
tether court cases, podcasts about tether, blog posts about tether from anonymous sources,
counterparties, price manipulation, regulation, exchange hacks, custody hacks, user data hacks,
project hacks, global macro, hard forks, Bitmex death spirals, stop runs, exit scams, other scams,
scammers, aggressive market makers, GBT nav trade unwinds, sim swaps, code bugs, Trump tweets,
false rumors, true rumors, tech obsolescence, rehypification, forced sellers, legal actions,
liquidity crunches, market illiquidity, Brad Sherman's punk ass, Satoshi's million Bitcoin,
Exchange order glitches, bad data, President Xi.
And that's not even close to an exhaustive list of the risks that are present.
But over its history, Bitcoin's up like 11 million percent.
So you've gotten paid for the risk that you've taken so far.
One in that list that maybe flew a little under the radar then, because this was February 6th,
was this idea of a GBTC Nav trade unwind. So what, pray tell, was the GBTC nav trade,
what is it unwind, and what might it mean for markets? Well, before we talk about the nav trade,
we should talk about what the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust is. However, I suppose before that a couple of
disclosures are in order. The first is that Grayscale is owned by the digital currency group,
the same company that owns CoinDesk. The second is that I'll use this as a chance to remind listeners
is that while CoinDesk is an unbelievable production, distribution, and sales partner of the show,
the breakdown is 100% entirely editorially controlled by me. I own the IP, I make the decisions about the
topics, and that was built in from day one into the terms of our partnership. Part of what I appreciate
so much about these guys is that they respected that independence right from the get-go.
So the point of that is that when I talk about grayscale, it's because it's relevant, not because
there's some larger overlapping interest. All right, put that out of the way, back to what the
Bitcoin Trust actually is. The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust is, one, the biggest Bitcoin fund in the
world, and two, the historical leader in letting public market investors get exposure to BTC
via a public market vehicle. The way it works is that accredited investors are able to buy
shares of the fund directly in daily private placements and then sell them on secondary
markets after a six-month lockup. The way that the share buying works is that people buy Bitcoin
and contribute it to the trust and get the equivalent amount of shares in return.
These secondary market shares have the ticker GBT, and historically, GBT has tended to trade
at a premium to the spot Bitcoin price, aka the net asset value NAV of the underlying.
Why? Well, it's simple. Right now, you can't invest in Bitcoin with your 401k, at least not
without some instrument like GBT. What's more, buying and selling Bitcoin directly has implications
for custody. There are some institutional investors who want to be able to buy big chunks of Bitcoin
without slippage due to crypto exchange illiquidity. There's also tax clarity, which goes back to the
401k argument. The point of all of this is that there are many investors for many reasons who prefer to
use public market vehicles for at least some part of their Bitcoin exposure. GBT facilitates that,
and historically that demand and the lack of other alternatives has produced a premium. And this is
especially true when markets are rising. Which brings us to last year. After the COVID crash,
markets were rising, effectively all year. I've spent plenty of time on the narrative dimension of this.
Be honest, how many of you guys can now recite the first paragraph of Paul Tudor Jones' great monetary
inflation thesis? But correspondingly, there was something going on that fit more cleanly in this
market structure bucket, and that had to do with the GBTC Nav trade. The nav trade was basically
a process by which firms took their Bitcoin and made it instantly more valuable by exchanging it
for GBTC shares, which were then worth a premium to the value of the BTC that was.
was exchanged for them. The trade-off, of course, was that those shares were locked up for six months,
but on paper those trades were lucrative right out of the gates. There was a lot of this trade
happening for a lot of last year. Some were general Bitcoin and Crypto Bulls who were just
taking advantage of this particular arbitrage opportunity. But according to others, there are more
than a few opportunists as well. One of the most important developments in this space is that
community banks, regional banks, and credit unions can now start offering Bitcoin to their
customers. That's right. Checking, saving, and now Bitcoin. It's all happening seamlessly thanks to a
platform by NIDIG that offers institutional grade custody and compliance. They're also the sponsor
of The Breakdown. And if you want to find out more, go to nidig.com slash NLW. That's nydig.com
forward slash NLW. On Luke Martin's show, Profit Maximilist, Twitter famous Lundart said that he saw a
pretty meaningful number of firms and funds last year used the paper gains of the
GBT NAVTC NAVT trade as a way to blunt other failures and losses. The example he used is that if a fund
bought $100 million when the premium was 20%, they could immediately book $20 million in profit on paper,
even though there was that six-month lockup. This could, as you might imagine, cover all
manner of sins. And that premium was available. There were record high premiums towards the end of last
year, getting all the way to 40% on December 17th. And whatever the combination of reasons that
companies were buying GBT shares, it feels clear in retrospect that the run-up in Bitcoin's price
was correlated with GBT buying. Lin Alden shared a chart that showed this dramatically.
What's more, she showed that as the premium turned to a discount, Grayscale stopped buying
and that within a couple months Bitcoin had started to fall again. On June 28, she tweeted,
Bears focusing on Tethers' impact on Bitcoin over the past year would have probably done
better to focus on the Grayscale neutral arbitrage trade instead. When new companies,
Competition resulted in the market taking away GBTC's premium to NAV, the biggest Bitcoin
buyer stopped buying.
In other words, part of the run-up in the second half of 2020 was due to the grayscale
neutral arbitrage trade sucking in a ton of Bitcoin.
When ETFs and other new ways to access Bitcoin made GBT less unique, the premium
went away so the neutral arb trade went away.
Then, of course, after the biggest buyer vanished, add retail investors pouring into
altcoins to euphoric levels, Elon's ESG backtracking, leveraged, leverage,
traders getting liquidated on the correction, momentum trader stepping away, etc. She goes on,
the biggest BTC buyer in Q2 2020 was Grayscale. When GBTC's premium over Nav turned into a discount
in late February 2021, the neutral arbitrage trade dried up and Grayscale stopped buying. It now
gradually sells BTC to fund expenses. Thus, the biggest buyer vanished and a lot of that was the
neutral arbitrage trade. So as you can see, Lynn's focus here is how the end of that particular trade
ended a particular buy pressure that had been key in driving prices up. But this week, that's only
been a part of the focus of the discussion. Where Twitter has really been focused is on what happens
as the shares that were bought six months ago actually unlock. Will this be bearish or bullish?
The opinions are extremely split. In J.P. Morgan's latest analysis, they consider it a bearish force.
They wrote, quote, despite some improvement, our signals remain overall bearish. Selling of
GBT's shares exiting the six-month lockup period during June and July has emerged as an
additional headwind for Bitcoin. As CoinDesk puts it, quote, after unlocking, investors have the
option of liquidating their shareholdings in the secondary market. Analysts at JPMorgan
foresee investors selling at least some of their shares, leading to downward pressure on GBT
prices and on Bitcoin markets more generally. On June 23rd, Meltem to Mirrors wrote,
One thing we haven't discussed yet, the grayscale GBTC unlock schedule is looking really crusty.
From mid-April to mid-June, 139,000 Bitcoin worth of shares have unlocked.
There's another 140,000 Bitcoin worth of shares that will unlock through the end of July.
Yeesh.
Ben Davenport pointed out on Lynn Alden's thread that it wasn't just the Grayscale had stopped buying Bitcoin.
He said, spot on, and it's actually worse than that.
The negative premium causes new marginal buyers of Bitcoin to be more attracted to buy
GBT than to buy spot, since discount will eventually close upon ETF conversion.
What he's referring to is the fact that Grayscale has signaled their commitment to transform the trust into a Bitcoin ETF,
and at that point there will no longer be a discount or a premium, it will just mirror the price of Bitcoin,
which means, in effect, this discount is just a discount on the eventual price of BTC.
Celsius's Alex Machinsky made a similar point, saying,
one, GBT discount will increase to as much as 25%, two, funds that will want to capture the Arb will short BTC and buy GPDC at the high discount.
But as I said, there is not consensus about this.
Lark Davis wrote an entire thread with more than 3,000 likes about just how wrong this
perspective was.
He tweets, later in July, starting from the 13th, Grayscale will begin the unlock of around
41,000 Bitcoin worth of GBTC shares.
But WTF does this actually mean and should you be worried?
One, Fuddmaster-in-Chief, J.P. Morgan, is saying that it will dump Bitcoin to 25K.
I tend to never believe what these criminal financial terrorists say is a rule of thumb.
The single biggest one-day unlock in July will be 16,244 Bitcoin worth of shares on the 18th.
The Bitcoin for these shares were locked on January 18th.
You may notice I keep saying shares.
This is because no spot Bitcoin is being released to market.
Instead, it is GBTC Trust shares.
Grayscale investors are forced into a six-month lockup, and the investors from January
are now getting their shares.
So will the share unlocks cause a catastrophic price crash for Bitcoin?
Let's look at the numbers.
No spot Bitcoin being released to market.
I can't emphasize this point enough. Here are some curious points to consider. There are around
35K Bitcoin of shares unlocked June 20th to 23rd, during which Bitcoin also dropped 20%. It also
coincided with the biggest China fud news and minor sell-off. Once and more interesting numbers,
December 19th to 21st saw 15K Bitcoin shares release. Price dropped 10%. Big releases in early February
had no negative effect since Tesla and Musk forced the markets higher. March 22nd and 24th
saw 17,000 Bitcoin worth of shares being released. Bitcoin dropped.
14%. Here's the real big story. From April 14th, the top until May 20th, one day post-bottom,
a total of 77,000 Bitcoin worth of GBTC shares were released. The biggest single-day release in that
period, May 20th, one day after the bottom. With someone shorting in advance of this release,
this mega-unlock period corresponds to a 50% drop in Bitcoin price. It is possible this is
correlation and not causation, yes, but you must admit it is super suspiciously timed.
Remember, no actual Bitcoin is being released to market, and yet the correlation is
incredible. Why are the markets dumping in unison with GBT unlocks if no spot dumping is happening?
It seems very clear that the institutions are shorting big time before major releases.
It is likely they will short the coming unlock of 41,000 Bitcoin worth of shares in late July.
Final thoughts. In theory, a GBT release should have no market impact on spot prices,
but this market, like all markets, is massively manipulated and the GPTC product is too
complex for most investors, so it allows manipulators to prey on you by spreading this information.
The good news is that after July, there won't be any more big GBT unlocks anytime soon.
So August will likely be quite bullish as the effect of the institution's shorting GBT releases subsides.
What am I doing? Same old, same old.
Buying Bitcoin on a regular basis, and if the manipulators drop it in late July due to this malarkey, then I will buy more.
So as you can see, Lark has some theories around manipulation in the market, but either way, he's not really worried.
He sees this as if anything, a transitory temporary phenomenon.
Willie Wu also had a threat on this.
he wrote, J.P. Morgan is bearish on the GBT unlock coming up. Here I'll go through the inner working
so you can make up your own mind. There are two impacts, one bullish, one bullish. The key is in how they
interact. In my opinion, it'll be immediately bullish. Grayscale is a unique product. It's designed as a
black hole that sucks in Bitcoin. No Bitcoin ever leaves the trust, apart from Grayscale taking its
two percent management fees from the holdings. This is the only way to reduce the GBT inventory.
How does GBT increase its holdings? They allow accredited investors to add BTC into the trust holdings in
return for receiving shares in the trust, which normally trades at a premium to BTC. This is the so-called
carry trade. It's historically been a lucrative trade. At times, the premium has traded at over
100% to the underlying BTC and the trust. The only catch is you have to hold your shares for six
months before you can sell them. The upcoming GBTC unlock we were referring to are these shares unlocking
in being available to be sold for cash. There are two impacts on the markets. One, derivatives.
Playing the carry trade. A, buy Bitcoin spot, put it into grayscale. B.
receive GBT shares. C, short BTC futures to hedge risk. D, earn yield from shorting Bitcoin. E,
earn the GBT premium. Unlocking. F, sell GbTC shares for U.S. D. G. Unhedge shorts. G is bullish.
Effectively what Willie is saying here is that part of this trade involved inherently shorting
Bitcoin as a hedge, and when the trade itself unwinds, so too do those shorts. For his second market
impact, he discusses the same sort of incentive that Ben Davenport was talking about before. He writes,
two spot markets. When GBTC shares unlock and get sold, the GBTC premium drops, share price drops
relative to the Bitcoin and the trust. Investors now have more incentive to buy GBTC shares
rather than BTC. It diverts some of the buying pressure on Bitcoin spot markets. This is bearish.
One, the derivatives impact is sudden and directly impactful, while two, the spot market impact
acts very slowly. The overall impact over the long term is neutral, as it's all arbitrage which
balances out in time. What we are analyzing is the short-term demand and supply imbalances which may
impact price. There's one more take on this that I want to add in, and it comes from a post by
QCP Capital. Effectively, their argument is that this is overblown and we're only discussing
it as much as we are because we have nothing else to discuss. They write, the upcoming unlocks
are for institutional holders who subscribe directly to GBTC six months ago.
And this batch consists of all the new Q1-2020 positions, largely ARC's last tranche.
To state clearly, we don't expect these unlocks on its own to have significant impact on the overall
market outside of GBTC itself.
Most of the large institutional positions who had subscribed in kind before have already been unlocked
earlier, and they have held off selling at the current discounted price.
Moreover, we know a large chunk of ARC's stake is for a variety of their current ETFs,
like their next generation internet ETF.
The fact that the market is so focused on something like this just shows the lack of
real catalysts of market-moving events right now. Let's wrap this up and what to make of all of this.
Well, for one, I genuinely have no idea what combination of bullish and bearish it is. And I don't
think I'm alone either. Altcoin Psycho asked a couple of days ago, is the GBTC unlock this month
bullish or bearish? Two days later and 140 comments later, there is no consensus. I will say that
one perspective that probably also deserves some airtime is the efficient market hypothesis take,
which is that GBTC unlocks are already priced in, given that we've known about them for
the entire duration of the trade, but that would require a whole episode on the efficient markets
hypothesis, so I think I'll pass that for now. If I was really pushed, I think my argument would be
that the unlock phenomenon is ultimately a pretty transitory phenomenon, and one that,
given that no one can really seem to decide what the outcome will be, is likely to net out to
fairly neutral, with only a little impact one direction or the other. What seems more significant
to me is simply acknowledging how tied into the run-up the RBT-Navtrade was in the first place.
In other words, the most bearish thing about grayscale isn't the set of unlocks.
It was the shift from a premium to a discount and the consequent loss of perhaps the biggest
buying pressure we had in the space.
That helps stop the momentum going into the absolute barrage of fud that characterized
the last quarter.
Ultimately, like I said at the beginning, I'm always interested to understand more about
market structure and the forces shaping markets that aren't just the narratives that make
so much intuitive sense to my brain.
So hopefully this journey has been helpful for you as well.
If you still have questions, hit me up on.
Twitter at NLW, and I'll do my best to get them answered. For now, guys, I appreciate you listening.
If you're enjoying the show, please go rate and review it. It makes a big difference.
And until tomorrow, be safe and take care of each other. Peace.
