No, Elon Musk's SpaceX Isn't the Cause of This Multi-Billion-Dollar Bitcoin Bloodbath

Bitcoin prices fell suddenly late on Thursday amid reports of hundreds of millions in sales, triggering a bloodbath across futures and spot markets.

AccessTimeIconAug 18, 2023 at 6:02 a.m. UTC
Updated Aug 18, 2023 at 2:19 p.m. UTC
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"Just woke up. WHO SOLD?"

This is what first crossed the mind of Reetika, a Dubai-based bitcoin (BTC) and crypto trader, during her usual routine of checking prices after waking up.

An unexpected and major sell-off in the crypto markets had jolted everyone after what had been a boring few weeks. Reetika's surprise was likely worldwide among traders and crypto hopefuls given how sudden and deep the losses were.

Bitcoin plunged on Thursday as traders sold the tokens en masse based on several unrelated catalysts, causing the crypto markets to lose 6.7% in overall capitalization in what marked one of the biggest drops in recent months.

As of about 06:00 UTC Friday, bitcoin had fallen as much as 9% over the past 24 hours to $25,000 from $28,500 on Binance, leading to a market-wide slump that sent major tokens like litecoin (LTC) tumbling by 14%. This caused more than $1 billion in crypto futures to be liquidated, a 14-month high.

Major tokens nosedived, painting a steep drop on price charts. (Coingecko)

Some pointed to space exploration company SpaceX’s supposed bitcoin sales – an unsubstantiated claim – while others said the bankruptcy of China Evergrande's may have had something to do with the fall. However, neither of these events are the probable cause.

A Wall Street Journal report late Thursday, citing internal company documents, noted Elon Musk's SpaceX had written down the value of its bitcoin holdings in 2021 and 2022 and has sold the cryptocurrency. But that report came out before the plunge, and there's zero evidence the company sold again Thursday.

Long squeeze and what really happened

Professional traders say market structure and liquidations were a likely reason for the sudden drop instead of a singular fundamental catalyst. The market has also been relatively illiquid and flat – creating conditions ripe for sudden movements.

“We've seen BTC [open interest] ramp up in position, with a bias to shorts,” said Decentral Park Capital trader Lewis Harland, in a message to CoinDesk. “The break below $28,500 led to material volumes of longs being liquidated. This has been combined with spot selling ahead of the date (likely anticipating further delays).”

Open interest refers to the number of unsettled futures contracts for any financial asset. In a flat market, the rapid building up of a significant amount of futures positions sometimes causes prices to fall quickly in the event of a large sell-off by an influential player.

That is because as prices fall, long traders have to sell their positions to avoid getting liquidated – adding to increased selling pressure, but, at the same time, creating an endless loop of falling prices and long position covering.

Data shows most long liquidations took place on crypto exchange OKX, accounting for nearly 40% of the entire market.

Liquidations across crypto exchanges. (Coinglass)
Liquidations across crypto exchanges. (Coinglass)

Some fundamental catalysts, however, are the rising interest rates in the U.S., as previously reported.

“U.S. interest rates are rising to multi-year highs. The 10-year yield has pushed to 15-year highs. This is bearish risk assets in general,” Harland added. “If this sell-off in bonds continues we could see continued negative price action in risk assets into the weekend.”

Elsewhere, analysts at on-chain data platform CryptoQuant told CoinDesk they expect sentiment to remain bearish in the days ahead – citing increased funding rates from short traders, or those who bet against prices.

Funding rates are periodic payments made by traders based on the difference between prices in the futures and spot markets. Depending on their open positions, traders will either pay or receive funding. The payments ensure there are always participants on both sides of the trade.

High rates can lead to price volatility, as traders are incentivized to be on one side of the market – thus increasing both futures and spot market movements.

Meanwhile, traders seem to be waiting on a Grayscale court ruling about the issuance of an exchange-traded fund (ETF), a ruling widely expected to be announced on Friday.

A federal appeals court will publish its ruling on the ongoing Grayscale vs. SEC case that would determine if the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was unreasonable in its repeated denial of Grayscale’s proposed bitcoin ETF. The ruling, in Grayscale’s favor, is expected to create a marketwide surge, while the opposite could jolt markets further.

Omkar Godbole contributed reporting.

UPDATE (Aug. 18, 08:22 UTC): Corrects spelling of Evergrande in sixth paragraph.

Edited by Parikshit Mishra.

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Shaurya Malwa

Shaurya is the Deputy Managing Editor for the Data & Tokens team, focusing on decentralized finance, markets, on-chain data, and governance across all major and minor blockchains.


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