‘Long Bitcoin’ chosen as most crowded trade in latest BofA survey

Published at: May 18, 2021

Despite the ongoing sideways trend in the cryptocurrency markets, Bitcoin (BTC) still remains a crowded trade. According to a new survey from Bank of America, this could indicate that the current bull cycle's market top is still to come.

Bank of America's most recent fund manager poll suggests that the “long Bitcoin” bet is now the most crowded trade across all markets, with nearly 45% of respondents indicating it ahead of other trades like “long tech,” Bloomberg reported Tuesday. The new BofA survey captured responses from 194 fund managers with $592 billion worth of assets under management.

In the survey remarks, BofA notes that trades identified as crowded have historically heralded an incoming top for their respective markets. Indeed, Bitcoin was trading just around $36,000 when BofA’s survey identified long Bitcoin as the most crowded trade in January. Bitcoin's price subsequently surged to break new all-time highs above $50,000 in February, eventually rising above $64,000 in mid-April.

Long Bitcoin was also chosen as the most crowded trade in Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s global fund manager survey back in September 2017. At the time, Bitcoin traded at around $4,000 before breaking $20,000 in December 2017 for the first time in history.

The latest BofA survey may add some optimism to cryptocurrency markets, which are currently experiencing mixed signals after a major market pullback. The ecosystem shed hundreds of billions of dollars after Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced the suspension of BTC payments for car purchases due to environmental concerns. He also hinted at dumping BTC from Tesla's balance sheet in the second quarter of 2021. However, some crypto players like CoinShares chief strategy officer Meltem Demirors believe that the latest BTC price action should be attributed to other reasons, such as tax-day selling.

In another survey in mid-April, BofA reported that 75% of professional investors see Bitcoin as a bubble. Some crypto activists suggested on Twitter that the majority of BofA fund managers do not trade Bitcoin.

The BofA survey of fund managers, 99% of whom can't trade bitcoin, think "long bitcoin" is the most crowded trade. The last time they did so was in January. It doubled 3 months later.

— zerohedge (@zerohedge) May 18, 2021
Tags
Related Posts
Bitcoin will likely reach $60K in 2021, says Investing.com analyst
Bitcoin (BTC) is likely to hit $60,000 in 2021 amid the growing mainstream adoption, according to an analyst at major financial publication Investing.com. Jesse Cohen, a senior financial analyst at Investing.com, predicted that Bitcoin will likely reach a $60,000 level in the first half of 2021. According to Cohen, Bitcoin’s growth in 2021 will be fueled by support from institutional investors combined with the “flush of ultra-cheap money being pumped into the global financial system” by global central banks like the United States’ Federal Reserve: “After a record-breaking year in 2020 that saw it jump more than 300%, Bitcoin looks …
Adoption / Feb. 4, 2021
Ark Invest founder Cathie Wood passed on buying the first Bitcoin futures ETF
Ark Invest founder and CEO Cathie Wood did not invest in the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy exchange-traded fund (ETF) on opening day, according to Business Insider. Wood said about the ETF’s debut: “No, we did not [invest]. We’re looking at this very carefully […] there are some tax ramifications we’d like to understand more having to do with contango versus more normal backwardation.” The contango of the ETF refers to when the future price of the commodity is higher than the spot price. Backwardation is when the forward price of the futures contract is lower than the spot price in a …
Adoption / Oct. 21, 2021
Forecasting Bitcoin price using quantitative models, Part 2
This is Part Two of a multipart series that aims to answer the following question: What is the “fundamental value” of Bitcoin? Part One is about the value of scarcity, Part Two — the market moves in bubbles, Part Three — the rate of adoption, and Part Four — the hash rate and the estimated price of Bitcoin. The market moves in bubbles In recent months or even years, there’s been a lot of talk about the bubbles developing in the bond markets. Newspapers — both financial and non-financial — talked about it, with specialized television stations and prestigious “macroeconomists” …
Technology / May 29, 2021
Crypto Fear and Greed index drops to October 2020 levels
With the Bitcoin (BTC) price dipping below a $29,000 threshold, the investor mood is worsening and the Crypto Fear and Greed index has plunged to October 2020 levels. On Jan. 22, the Crypto Fear and Greed index sharply dropped to a value of 40, moving the market sentiment from “Extreme Greed” to “Fear.” The index dropped to this low for the first time since Oct. 3, 2020, when Bitcoin was trading at around $10,500. Similar to the fear and greed indexes in the traditional markets, the Crypto Fear and Greed index is a tool that measures two of the primary …
Technology / Jan. 22, 2021
Not bad for 2020: Up 42% in Q4, Bitcoin price outperforms top bank stocks
Historically, traditional market analysts and old school investors tend to look at Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies with a wary eye, and when crypto pundits attempt to make comparisons between the two these investors say it's an apples to oranges argument. Take, for example, Warren Buffett, who many a time has said Bitcoin is nothing more than a Ponzi scheme as it does not produce anything and therefore has no value. According to these traditionalists, comparing Bitcoin to Apple, Tesla, or a bank stock like JPMorgan is irrational as the latter employ workers, produce products, and generate revenues and dividends which …
Adoption / Nov. 5, 2020