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More Than Arbitrage: $2.5B Inflow in Spot BTC ETFs Features Bullish Directional Bets

Institutions seem to be moving away from traditional cash and carry arbitrage to pure directional plays, according to observers.

Updated Oct 22, 2024, 2:33 p.m. Published Oct 22, 2024, 1:27 p.m.
(Aaron Burden/Unsplash)
(Aaron Burden/Unsplash)
  • The mismatch between spot ETF inflows and the spike in CME futures open interest suggests bias for bullish directional bets, CF Benchmarks explained.
  • Elevated futures premium suggests the same, according to Bitwise.

If you are disappointed by bitcoin's failure to get past $70,000, here is an insight that might brighten your day – The recent strong uptake for the U.S.-listed spot ETFs, often considered a proxy for institutional activity, mainly featured bullish directional bets than arbitrage plays.

Since Oct. 14, the 11 spot BTC ETFs registered a cumulative net inflow of nearly $2.5 billion, the largest since March, according to data tracking website SoSoValue. Meanwhile, notional open interest or the dollar value of the active bitcoin futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) surged to new record highs above $12 billion, according to data source VeloData.

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Seasoned investors may see the concurrent rise in the two variables as a sign of continued institutional preference for cash and carry arbitrage, a non-directional strategy aimed at profiting from the price discrepancy between spot and futures prices. That was supposedly the case early this year, as institutions set up the so-called basis trade, involving a long ETF position and a short CME futures position, leaving bitcoin largely flat below $70,000.

The latest ETF inflows, however, indicate a bias for bullish plays via spot ETFs, according to Sui Chung, CEO of crypto index provider CF Benchmarks.

"An increase in basis trading is usually apparent when the inflow into spot ETFs and growth in CME OI correspond with one another. But in this case, there's a clear mismatch with the $2.5 billion ETF flows far exceeding the $1.6 billion increase in open interest for CME's bitcoin futures contracts," Chung told CoinDesk.

"This tells us that only a proportion (we estimate around 40%) of the ETF inflow is down to basis trading; the other 60% or $1.4 billion is directional holding," Chung added. Most bitcoin spot ETFs refer to CF Benchmarks' Bitcoin Reference Rate - New York (BRRNY) variant.

Futures premium spikes

The elevated futures premium also undercuts any notion of ETF inflows being driven by cash and carry trades. A mass deployment of the strategy typically "arbs away" the premium, limiting the price differential.

The annualized one-month BTC futures premium (basis) on the CME increased from roughly 6% to 13.9% last week, the highest since May, according to data tracked by K33 Research. The funding rates in perpetual markets also increased, suggesting a bias for bullish long trades.

"The bitcoin basis rate [futures premium] has been moving up, implying a bias towards long positioning, which tends to steepen the futures curve and increase contango. The same is reflected in the perpetual funding rate, which has increased to the highest level since July 2024," André Dragosch, director, head of research - Europe at Bitwise, told CoinDesk.

"Market makers like Jane Street tend to increase their BTC short positioning with increasing BTC ETF inventories; the latest evidence suggests that there has been a net increase in long positioning via futures and perpetuals more recently," Dragosch added.

BTC CME futures: Annualized rolling one-month basis/premium. (K33 Research)
BTC CME futures: Annualized rolling one-month basis/premium. (K33 Research)

That said, some market participants seem to have bought ETFs while shorting CME futures. In the week ended Oct. 15, non-commercials or large speculators held a net short position of 1872 contracts, the highest since March, according to data tracked by Tradingster.

"The latest data on CME Bitcoin Futures Non-Commercial net positioning imply that futures traders are net short on CME. However, on aggregate across all kinds of futures exchanges, the data imply the opposite," Dragosch noted.

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