Nov 19 (Reuters) – Joe McCann was sitting in his Miami condo, eyes glued to screens flashing with bitcoin trades as the American election results rolled in.
“When the first polls closed, we started to see massive U.S. buying and it just hasn’t stopped since,” said McCann, founder of crypto-focused hedge fund Asymmetric. “The sentiment in the crypto community is a form of elation at this point.”
Meanwhile, U.S.-listed exchange-traded funds tracking the spot price of bitcoin, products favored by institutional investors, notched their biggest daily net inflows on record of $1.43 billion dollars on Nov. 7, according to CoinShares.
Yet many market players cautioned that investors could get burned by profit-taking and market pullbacks in the coming weeks, with Coinglass’ bitcoin “fear and greed” index – a measure of market sentiment – firmly in “greed” territory.
“Expect some confusion as even the most sophisticated and connected market participants try to parse if a Trump administration means a more balanced regulatory regime, a Wild West free-for-all, or if Trump will simply forget about crypto entirely,” said Matthew Graham, managing partner at Ryze Labs.
CRYPTO MARKET TOPS $3 TRILLION
It’s definitely getting choppy.
Bitcoin’s annualized 30-day volatility ticked back up to over 58%, its highest since September and after slumping as slow as 25% in June, according to data from The Block.
The market gains go beyond bitcoin; The total cryptocurrency market value has soared to an all-time high of $3.16 trillion, according CoinGecko. Open interest on derivatives exchanges is at a record high of over $102 billion, Coinglass data showed.
Ethereum has jumped about 32% since the election, while the market value of decentralized finance-focused tokens touched a five-month high of $93 billion.
Despite the initial excitement, details on what exactly will change under a new administration remain hazy.
The main focus now is the appointment of Trump’s U.S. Treasury Secretary, with a few potential candidates including Howard Lutnick and Scott Bessent, seen as more crypto friendly.
Ryan Lee, chief analyst at Bitget Research, warned traders should stay alert for sudden pullbacks: “The appointment could trigger short-term speculation.”
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Reporting by Lisa Mattackal and Shashwat Chauhan in Bengaluru; Graphic by Vineet Sachdev; Editing by Pravin Char
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