Quant Explains How Bitcoin Derivatives Data Can Be Used For Trading
15 February 2023 - 11:30PM
NEWSBTC
A quant has explained how the data of the Bitcoin derivatives
indicators like open interest and liquidations can be leveraged as
a short-term trading tool. Bitcoin Derivatives Market Data As A
Short-Term Trading Tool As explained by an analyst in a CryptoQuant
post, yesterday’s price action was a good example of how the
futures market influences the value of the cryptocurrency. There
are two relevant indicators here. The first is the “open interest,”
which measures the total amount of Bitcoin futures contracts that
are currently open on all derivative exchanges. When the value of
this metric trends up, it means investors are opening up more
contracts on the futures market currently. Since more contracts
generally accompany increased leverage as well, the open interest
going up can cause a higher amount of volatility for the BTC price.
On the other hand, decreasing values of the indicators imply
holders are closing up their contracts or getting forcefully
liquidated right now. As this naturally leads to lower leverage in
the market, BTC could follow up with less volatility. The other
metric of interest here is the “long/short liquidations,” which
measures the total amount of long/short contracts (in USD) that are
being forcefully closed off by exchanges as a result of investors
accumulating losses that have eaten away a specific percentage of
their collateral. Related Reading: Here’s What’s Needed For The
Bitcoin Rally To Resume Now, here is a chart that shows the
zoomed-in trend of the Bitcoin open interest and futures
liquidations, as well as the BTC price, during the action seen
yesterday: How the activity in the futures market has resulted in
the price action seen yesterday | Source: CryptoQuant In the above
graph, the quant has marked how the Bitcoin open interest and
futures liquidations (both long and short) related to the price of
the cryptocurrency through each portion of yesterday’s burst of
price action. At first, the price was going down, but the open
interest was increasing in value, suggesting that short positions
were piling up on the market. Then, in a sudden upwards price move,
a large amount of these shorts were liquidated, which only fueled
the price surge further. Related Reading: Ethereum Exchange Supply
Has Fallen 37% Post Merge: Santiment Naturally, the open interest
declined as this move took place, because of all the short
liquidations. After this steep climb, the price fell back to
sideways movement, but the open interest started climbing. The
analyst notes that this suggests investors had begun to open up
long positions because of FOMO induced by the sudden rise. Finally,
the Bitcoin price reversed its direction, resulting in these now
piled-up longs getting liquidated in the same way as shorts did
earlier, which again only amplified the move and caused BTC to see
an extended drawdown. BTC Price At the time of writing, Bitcoin is
trading around $22,100, down 4% in the last week. BTC continues to
be stuck in a range | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView Featured image
from Traxer on Unsplash.com, charts from TradingView.com,
CryptoQuant.com
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